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Jellyfish

Jellyfish are also cnidarians, like corals, but the jellyfish we are familiar with are usually the free-swimming medusa stage of their life-cycle.

Commonly stranded after a storm is the balloon-like bluebottle (Physalia) which is related to the Portuguese Man-o-War.  This is actually a colony, each polyp specialising in a function such as an air bladder or a stinging tentacle.  Occasionally found the are two disc-shaped jellyfish with hanging tentacles – Velella with its little sail and Porpita  without a sail.


Physalia tentacles can sting quite severely, even when dried, but the other two are harmless.

Click on each image for a larger view.

Blue bottle

Bluebottle     Physalia physalis   

This aptly-named jellyfish is often beached in large numbers after a storm.  Surprisingly, a bluebottle is not an individual, but a colony of specialised polyps.  Some capture food, some digest the food, some reproduce and one becomes the gas-filled float.  The sting is very painful.  The local bluebottle is closely related to the Portuguese Man-o-war which occurs in northern Australian waters and overseas. 

 

 

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