HAVANA — Australian endurance swimmer Chloe McCardel ended her attempt to swim from Cuba to Florida after 11 hours in the water when she was stung by a jellyfish Wednesday night.
It was the fifth failure involving three women swimmers who have tried to make the marathon swim since 2011. Jellyfish stings and strong currents have been the main impediments.
Her support team released a statement saying that McCardel stopped her effort to become the first person to swim across the Straits of Florida nonstop without a shark cage "due to a severe debilitating jellyfish sting."
It said she had been taken on to one of her support vessels and was sailing to Key West. She would need 24 hours to recuperate, it said.
Bob Olin, skipper of the primary support boat, the Sunluver, said McCardel had suffered multiple stings.
"She got nailed all over her body — back, legs and arms. Nailed multiple times, all at the same time," he told The Associated Press by satellite phone.
He said the team tried to treat her wounds while she remained in the water, but had to take her on board a boat because she was suffering "excruciating pain."
The swimmer had not said much since leaving the water, Olin said.