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ctenophore Lampea pancerina eating a chain of salps.

ctenophore Lampea pancerina eating a chain of salps.
ctenophore Lampea pancerina eating a chain of salps.
ctenophore Lampea pancerina eating a chain of salps.
ctenophore Lampea pancerina eating a chain of salps.
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143100
Madin, Laurence P.
ctenophore Lampea pancerina eating a chain of salps.
Still Image
08/19/2008
graphics/madin_slides/lampea_pancerina.jpg
Image of The Day caption:
Many kinds of gelatinous and transparent "jellies" inhabit the oceans, and some even eat other jellies. On the left--biting off more than it can chew--is Lampea pancerina, a species of ctenophore, or--comb jelly." It speciallizes in eating salps (gelatinous animals that eat tiny marine plants) and can stretch to consume meals much bigger than itself. Scientists find that jellies have much to offer science; they even played a role with Nobel Prize-winning research this week. Chemists from Japan and America, including one affiliated with Woods Hole, won for their development of a green fluorescent protein from jellyfish that has provided researchers a new window into the workings of the cell. The fluorescent proteins are used for observing the growth and fate of specific cells, like nerve cells, damaged during Alzeheimer's disease or due to tumors.
Photo by Larry Madin
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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