They both use there tentacles to capture there prey and the mouth is near the center of the body
Yeah
No.
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Squid, jellyfish and octopuses are examples of ocean invertebrates.
Octopuses are not transparent, and are usually larger, and shaped totally different from jellyfish. They have eight arms, while jellyfish have tentacles, string-like in shape.
The answer is very simple. Jellyfish are cnidarians. Octopi are not. Because the octopus does not have the same head structure as the jellyfish. Also octopi are cephalopods. They are closer to mollusks in the bases of things but the tentacles are different. Just because they have tentacles does not mean they are in the same categories. But octopi and squid are in the same category as mollusks such as snails. That is a different story though. But that is why they are not the same.
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Chameleons cuttlefish fish octopuses some eals and some bioluminescent jellyfish
Octopuses can remove the stinging tentacles from the Man-of-War and wield them against other creatures of the sea. This is because the Octopus is resistant to the stinging effects of the Man-of-War.
The animal that has the same adaptations as a box jellyfish is a string jellyfish
It may be hard to say, but it depends on the type of the jellyfish. A box jellyfish or a portuguese man of war has slightly more powerful toxic than blue ringed octopuses. Portuguese man of wars poison is very painful that it can even cause shock, fever, and lung and heart problems. Other jellyfishes like the giant jellyfish, no. The box jellyfish's venom can easily stop heart and systems functioning. But it is very weird how a lot of people say that blue ringed octopuses poison is strong enough to kill twenty to forty fully-grown humans at a time.
yep!!! since they don't have bones or anything their just like octopuses, they can get into any small space!!(: hope this helps
sharks, seals, octopuses, lobsters, clams, clownfish, eels, sea urchins, dolphins, and jellyfish just to name a couple