Yes, they can and it is just a natural habit. It doesn't make them ill.
Portuguese Man-of-War jellyfish are also known as bluebottles.
Bluebottles are named after their shiny, iridescent blue-green color. This coloration helps to attract potential mates and is also a form of defense against predators.
They are a scavengers and predators so they are carniverous
every dolphin sleeps with one eye open.
fireflies,flies,grasshoppers,dragonflies,bluebottles and much more.
Yes they do they wait about a min. to get back in the water or if they don't they die
Yes blue bottles tentacles can range up to 10 metres in length!
No jellyfish flow with the current because they have nothing to propell them through the water. This is why sometimes bluebottles are washed upon the shore. Because the current has come in and they cannot swim away and therefore become beached.
Yes it's safe, as long as you don't do anything stupid like run off into unmapped bush or swim with bluebottles. Always listen to the Australians, they know what they're doing in their own country.
There is no specific collective noun for bottles, in which case, a general collective noun applicable to the circumstances is used; for example a six-pack of bottles, a row of bottles, a collection of bottles, a case of bottles, etc. Or, having glanced in the trash bin the morning after a party, an embarrassment of bottles.
Catherine Caufield has written: 'The Man Who Ate Bluebottles' 'Tropical moist forests' -- subject(s): Deforestation, Human ecology, Rain forests, Rain forest conservation, Social conditions 'Masters of Illusion the World Bank and the Poverty of Nations'