Yes, the head of a jellyfish is called a bell.
The Arctic jellyfish is 120feet from head to tinicle.
under head
Jellyfish do not have a head: they are radially symmetrical animals that have a sack-like body with a single opening serving as a mouth, and a bell extending out from the bottom of the sack that allows the jellyfish to swim.
Yes; jellyfishes have no head.
yes
blue bottle jellyfish or portugeuse man of war
bell
You hold the jellyfish with the part that doesn't have tentacles. This means that you hold it where their head is.
on the ground of jellyfish fields
The Cassiopeia jellyfish, sometimes found in the Florida Keys, do rest on the sea floor on their head.
Jellyfish can eat in shallow or deep water. They use their tentacles to capture their prey and pull the prey in to their mouths. The mouth of the jellyfish is located under the bell or head of the jellyfish. They are carnivores and eat animals such as shrimp, zooplankton, and small fish.
Yes, they do all the time, even though jellyfish do not have brains, their stinging tentacles are near invisible in water. Unsuspecting fish swim into these tentacles and are paralyzed by the stinging cells that the jellyfish contains which affect the nervous system. The fish is then drawn into the 'head' of the jellyfish and digested.