0.2 pounds
Yes
No it is toxic
It seems that not many people know about the Bloodybelly Comb Jelly, and we are still in the dark ages with the amount of knowledge we about them.
They can have 10,000
Ctenophora
jelly fish+
they eat fish
I don't know, but one way to find out is to weigh a cubic inch of jelly then multiply that weight by 1728 (123).
Common Northern Comb Jelly
Ctenophora - Comb Jellies There are over 100 species of comb jelly, and most are transparent planktonic predators. They swim feebly by beating rows of plates made from fused hair-like cilia (the 'combs') and catch their prey with dangling tentacles. •The tentacles usually have 'colloblasts' on them which help the tentacles stick to the animals they touch. (Colloblasts are single cells that give off a gluey substance when touched.) •One type of comb jelly feeds on true jellyfish and is able to use the stinging cells (cnidocytes) on its tentacles, in much the same way as some of the sea slugs.
This animals always goes near the beaches