I think that jelly fish can glow but, I think only in water........ maybe
yes jelly fish do glow in the dark, try placing it on the outside of your shoe and slap it with your other shoe in the dark on the beach and you will notice they jelly fish glow..
some special features are that they glow
Common Northern Comb Jelly or Bolinopsis infundibulum
fleboglow
there are many
Glofish are really Zebra Danios that have had a jellyfish gene added artificially to make them glow.
No, it is not possible to put jellyfish DNA into a human and have the human glow. The glowing property in jellyfish comes from a protein called green fluorescent protein (GFP), which would not work the same way in a human body due to differences in biology and genetic makeup.
Jellyfish can bioluminesce when they are stimulated. The luminescent light produced is bluish in color, attributable to a molecule known as aequorin, but in a living jellyfish it is emitted via a coupled molecule known as GFP, or green fluorescent protein, which causes the emitted light to appear green.
Jellyfish genes are used within genetically engineering certain foods. The jellyfish genes are added to wheat to make the wheat glow when it needs water.
Jellyfish species are known for their gelatinous bodies, tentacles with stinging cells, and radial symmetry. They can range in size from tiny to large and are found in oceans worldwide. Jellyfish are known for their pulsating movements and some species can glow in the dark.
They are "Brachydanio rerio" aka Zebra Danios that have had a jellyfish gene added scientifically to make them glow.
Glow fish are Zebra Danios that have had a jellyfish gene added to them to make them glow. They will eat Brine Shrimp avidly.
They can be found deep in the ocean. The ones that glow are more common the deeper you go because the lack of sunlight at that point.