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Halicreas minimum
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Halicreas minimum
Halicreas minimum
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iBase ID
336961
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Madin, Laurence
Title
Halicreas minimum
Halicreas minimum
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Animation
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Date
01/07/2009
File name
graphics/Jellyfish/9.jpg
Notes
Featured in the Open Ocean Jellies poster, available at the Ocean Science Exhibit Center. Info from poster: Probably the most familiar jellies are jellyfish, such as this one--technically called medusae, and belonging to two divisions of the phylum Cnidaria. Jellyfish are predators that use tentacles studded with stinging cells to catch and kill their prey, usually smaller zooplankton or fish. Although jellyfish have a very simple body structure, with no central nervous system, all have evolved efficient ways to catch their food. They swim by jet propulsion, and many are capable of complex migration patterns. In many species, the medusa is a stage that alternates with another form that lives attached to the bottom. Image of The Day caption: Probably the most familiar jellies are jellyfish, such as this one?technically called medusae, and belonging to two divisions of the phylum Cnidaria. Jellyfish are predators that use tentacles studded with stinging cells to catch and kill their prey, usually smaller zooplankton or fish. Although jellyfish have a very simple body structure, with no central nervous system, all have evolved efficient ways to catch their food. They swim by jet propulsion, and many are capable of complex migration patterns. In many species, the medusa is a stage that alternates with another form that lives attached to the bottom.
Featured in the Open Ocean Jellies poster, available at the Ocean Science Exhibit Center.
Info from poster:
Probably the most familiar jellies are jellyfish, such as this one--technically called medusae, and belonging to two divisions of the phylum Cnidaria. Jellyfish are predators that use tentacles studded with stinging cells to catch and kill their prey, usually smaller zooplankton or fish. Although jellyfish have a very simple body structure, with no central nervous system, all have evolved efficient ways to catch their food. They swim by jet propulsion, and many are capable of complex migration patterns. In many species, the medusa is a stage that alternates with another form that lives attached to the bottom.
Image of The Day caption:
Probably the most familiar jellies are jellyfish, such as this one?technically called medusae, and belonging to two divisions of the phylum Cnidaria. Jellyfish are predators that use tentacles studded with stinging cells to catch and kill their prey, usually smaller zooplankton or fish. Although jellyfish have a very simple body structure, with no central nervous system, all have evolved efficient ways to catch their food. They swim by jet propulsion, and many are capable of complex migration patterns. In many species, the medusa is a stage that alternates with another form that lives attached to the bottom.
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© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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Video by Ken Kostel
Video by Matthew Barton
WHOI Creative © Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
-- Other --
Photo by Laurence Madin
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Unless otherwise noted (copyrighted material for example), information presented on this World Wide Web site is considered publi
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jdoucette: for Ben Wallace jdoucette: for Ben Wallace jdoucette: for WHOI marketing by Mascola jdoucette: for Mascola AEARLY: Mesobot Talk - NYC Event 9/2017 etaylor: Calendar aearly: Various eblasts etaylor: Under the Waves efitzpatrick: book efitzpatrick: magazine article efitzpatrick: CSIRO dfino: whoi.edu dpandya: jelly fish fheide: cdcalendar adorsk: library website images dbrown: Redfield Display Monitor dglover: to check for potential cover images jdoucette: Image of The Day, 02/24/2010 kpatterson: MIT Museum exhibit ekoenig: jellies for NEAq request
jdoucette: for Ben Wallace
jdoucette: for Ben Wallace
jdoucette: for WHOI marketing by Mascola
jdoucette: for Mascola
AEARLY: Mesobot Talk - NYC Event 9/2017
etaylor: Calendar
aearly: Various eblasts
etaylor: Under the Waves
efitzpatrick: book
efitzpatrick: magazine article
efitzpatrick: CSIRO
dfino: whoi.edu
dpandya: jelly fish
fheide: cdcalendar
adorsk: library website images
dbrown: Redfield Display Monitor
dglover: to check for potential cover images
jdoucette: Image of The Day, 02/24/2010
kpatterson: MIT Museum exhibit
ekoenig: jellies for NEAq request
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