Cnidariais
great question, yes a portuguese man-of-war can kill a jellyfish.
No, the portuguese man of war does not migrate, because it does not have any control of where it is going, the water takes it places.
a portuguse man-of-war is not a parasite. a parasite is a plant or animal who lives on another for some time till the host (the being suporting the the parasite)dies or the parasite moves to another host. the portuguse man-of-war hunts its own prey and eats them. for more information, look up portuguse man-of-war
Physalia physalis is the scientific name of the Portuguese man-of-war. The name originates in the ancient Greek word phusallis for "bellows" or "bladder." It stresses the Portuguese man-of-war's impressive buoyancy because of the gas-filled bladder.
The Man-O-War jellyfish love small fish like krill, clownfish and bait ECT...
The Portuguese man-of-war belongs to the phylum Cnidaria.
A portuguese man-of-war is in the cnideria phylum (weren't you paying attention in 7th grade Life Science?) A portuguese man-of-war is in the cnideria phylum (weren't you paying attention in 7th grade Life Science?) A portuguese man-of-war is in the cnideria phylum (weren't you paying attention in 7th grade Life Science?)
a butt
The portugese-man-of-war is in the phylum "cnidarias"
The full classification of the Portuguese Man-of-War isKingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: CnidariaClass: HydrozoaOrder: SiphonophoraFamily: PhysaliidaeGenus: PhysaliaSpecies: Physalis
Phlum cnidaria (jellyfish, corals etc).
The Portuguese Man o' War is Carribean.
a Portuguese man of war eats small fish
A Portuguese man of war is similar to a jellyfish, so it has no backbone.
Portuguese Man o' War was created in 1758.
The Portuguese man o' war lives in the Atlantic Ocean.
(Portuguese) man of war is Physalia physalis, a siphonophore hydrozoan. Or, a jellyfish.