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AAP
AAP
Fraser Barton and Keira Jenkins

Four people in three days flown from island with stings

The Irukandji jellyfish is small but one of the most venomous in the world. (HANDOUT/SOUTH AUSTRALIAN MUSEUM)

Four people in three days have been taken to hospital after suffering jellyfish stings at a popular Queensland tourist spot.

They are all believed to have been stung by Irukandji, one of the world's most venomous jellyfish.

A teenage girl was treated on Tuesday after being stung on the hand at Fraser Island, which has the Indigenous name K'gari.

A RACQ LifeFlight rescue helicopter landed on a beach on the western side of the island after 1pm, transporting the girl to Hervey Bay Hospital in a stable condition accompanied by her mother.

The previous day the rescue helicopter landed on the same spot to treat a baby and a man for jellyfish stings, just hours apart.

The infant was on Monday taken to Hervey Bay hospital in a stable condition, accompanied by a parent.

Just two hours earlier, the helicopter arrived at the island to transport the man in his 20s to hospital.

On Sunday a girl who had been camping with her family on K'gari was stung by a jellyfish and airlifted to Hervey Bay Hospital. 

There have also been six dingo-related incidents on K'gari since December 10, including a man who was bitten on the leg on Monday.

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