If they are completely dried up then no. If they are still moist and LOOK like they could in fact be alive or still sting you, then it is best to stay clear. Most jellyfish are OK except for the box jellyfish found mostly around and in the water of Queensland, Australia.
Yes, jellyfish do die shortly after they wash up on the shore. They often wash up because of strong tides but people can still be stung by them when they are dead.
maybe because they can not swim against some waves and so they get washed up or they are already dead
They get washed up by the tide.
They are NOT poisonous. They are venomous. Check you facts, look it up, or at least learn it!
very rarely. and if they do, they get washed up on shore.
Sea Turtle's favorite snack is jelly fish.Since a jellyfish is a sea turtles favorite snack, sea turtles often eat plastic bags thinking there jellyfish and sea turtles die and their bodies get washed up on our beaches.
Dog
On the seabed, or washed up in estuaries and on beaches.
No oil has affected Mexico beaches. No oil has washed up in Texas.
The lions mane jellyfish was first discovered in 1870 when there was one found washed up on the shore at Massachusetts Bay.
a jellyfish gets its name from how clear it is and the way it lays on the ground when it is washed up on shoreBecause it is clear and it looks like a fish when it is on sure
No, jellyfish do not have bones in their body. Instead of a backbone they have mesoglea, or a gelatinous substance that acts as a structural support in water, but if they get washed up on the shore, their bodies will collapse.
the eggs are not from jellyfish, but i know that the first egg that is hatched eats the rest of its siblings. this stops the creatures from over-multiplying. amazing, huh?