They eat other jellies such as the comb jelly. They also eat plankton.
humans that live in Japanese and chienese
No, fish do not eat jams, jellies, or other preserves.
chelonia mydas eat seaweed and algae, but they can also eat sea creatures like jellyfish, comb jellies, crayfish, and also crabs.
He does not eat worms the worms are specialy get ready before match so they are lik jellies but look real so answer is NO
It depends on how long the polyp lives, because the polyp creates the baby jellyfish. If it gets killed after letting off one batch of jellies, you can expect somewhere in between 8-16 new jellies. but usually, polyps live long enough to make several new batches of jellies. Also, a polyp may bud off another polyp, which will also begin making new jellies. So one jellyfish may make hundreds or thousands of new jellies. Of course, not all of them survive.(Just to let you know, polyps finish growing baby jellies roughly yearly)
humans that live in Japanese and chienese
With a spoon.
with there mouth dah
aeroplane jelly
No, fish do not eat jams, jellies, or other preserves.
Siphonophores eat copepods, krill, other small fish and occasionally other jellies
They eat invertebrate eggs, larvae, copepods, and smaller jellies.
Jellies,whale sharks,and sea horses
plankton and fish like other jellies
A cornefladger crystal
Yes, the box jellies eat zoo-plankton and small fish (^_^)
It depends on what the jellyfish eat if the jellyfish does not make its own food it is a consumer