yes
Humans will avoid these to prevent a painful sting. Humans also study them.
The jellyfish chart provides information about different species of jellyfish, including their names, sizes, habitats, and any potential dangers they may pose to humans.
Humans have bones, jellyfish don't. Jellyfish are see through, humans aren't. Jellyfish will evaporate in the sun, humans won't. Jellyfish live under water, humans don't. Jellyfish have stinging tentacles, humans don't. Humans have different organs than jellyfish and allot more.
Jellyfish live side by side with plants in the ocean. They do not really do not interact with plants outside of eating some plants.
There is no answer to this. Jellyfish, as do humans, come in all different shapes and sizes.
Humans can positively impact jellyfish populations by creating marine protected areas, which can help maintain balanced ecosystems that support their natural habitats. Efforts to reduce pollution and manage coastal development can lead to healthier oceans, benefiting jellyfish as part of the marine food web. Additionally, research and monitoring by scientists can lead to better understanding and conservation strategies that promote jellyfish diversity and health.
they do interact with humans
The box jellyfish, which can be fatal to humans.
Only tamed elephants can interact with humans but wild elephants can't interact with humans.
they live everywhere there is warm water
Yes; they can be.
to eat