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 full classification of the Portuguese Man-of-War isKingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: CnidariaClass: HydrozoaOrder: SiphonophoraFamily: PhysaliidaeGenus: PhysaliaSpecies: Physalis
Phlum cnidaria (jellyfish, corals etc).
The portugese-man-of-war is in the phylum "cnidarias"
The Portuguese Man o' War is Carribean.
A Portuguese man of war is similar to a jellyfish, so it has no backbone.
a Portuguese man of war eats small fish
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.