Yes; however many of them are not poisonous for primates, but inoculate allergens, which can kill by anaphylactic shock.
Yes, if I'm not wrong......
some are
yes, very deadly. With one sting you could die. Jellyfish have 5,000 stinging cells in their tentacles.
No, in some parts of Asia people eat jellyfish on a regular basis. So at least some jellyfish are not poisonous.
they are nasty and painful, but not fatal.
Yes.
"A lance inside the nematocyst pierces the victim's skin, and poisen flows through into the victim."
Sting effects range from no effect to extreme pain to death.
Yes. Their stings can be very deadly and painful.
no not all jellyfish are deadly
yes, I am pretty sure that there are poisonous jellyfish in the Bahamas.
yes,it is very poisonous!
There are several different poisonous jellyfish. They belong to the box jellyfish species. Some of the most popular are the Chironex Fleckeri, Irukandji, Fire Jelly, and the Morton Bay Stinger.
yes it is !
Yes.
You might call a poisonous jellyfish a "jellyfish" because all of these animals are either venomous or poisonous or both. This is because a jellyfish needs venom in order to kill its prey so that it can eat.
The most poisonous species of jellyfish are said to be Chironex fleckeri and Carukia barnesi, both Cubozoa.Carukia barnesi is the IrukandjiThe most poisonous type of jellyfish is the ''box jellyfish''. Getting stung from this type of jellyfish will usually cause death in around 180 seconds.Some species of box jellyfish produce extremely potent venom: Chironex fleckeri, Carukia barnesi and Malo kingi are among the most venomous creatures in the world. Stings from these and a few other species in the class are extremely painful and can be fatal to humans.There are hundreds of species of poisonous jellyfish in the world. One of these very famous poisonous jellyfish is the box jellyfish.
The box jellyfish is the most venomous; the arrow frog the most poisonous. Poisonous and venomous are not the same thing.
They are NOT poisonous. They are venomous. Check you facts, look it up, or at least learn it!
No.
Sea Turtles would hunt and eat the smaller jellyfish, but not the giant jellyfish.
There are giant jellyfish found throughout the ocean. Depending on the breed, the pattern of migration is pattern. For example a Nomura jellyfish is often found around Japan.