thousands of years ago, millions of jellyfish were trapped in the lake, when a submerged reef rose from the sea. the jellyfish adapted to their surroundings by losing their sting completely. you can now swim safely with sixteen million jellyfish in jellyfish lake.
Well the question is worded badly seeing that there is a lot of different types of jellyfish that reach different heights, the larger types of jellyfish can reach 8 feet diameter, with tentacles reaching 150 ft long. information found: http://www.aquaticcommunity.com/jellyfish/facts.php
Jellyfish are heterotrophs.
Jellyfish vary in color. It depends on what kind of Jellyfish. Most are partially transparent.
Florida's water is home to many species of jellyfish. Examples include by-the-wind sailor jellyfish, mushroom cap jellyfish, box jellyfish and sea nettle. The Portuguese man-of-war also live near Fort Lauderdale, but is not actually a jellyfish.
The largest jellyfish is the giant jellyfish.
by creating clones
the salmon has gills and the jellyfish does not
Yes. Although most jellyfish are marine animals, some inhabit freshwater.
Probably not.
Water would diffuse into the cells of the jellyfish, causing it to bloat up and possibly burst.
it is almost the last but a different animal eats it in the lake,pond and marsh.
It would die.
Humans have bones, jellyfish don't. Jellyfish are see through, humans aren't. Jellyfish will evaporate in the sun, humans won't. Jellyfish live under water, humans don't. Jellyfish have stinging tentacles, humans don't. Humans have different organs than jellyfish and allot more.
if the lake had once been connected to the ocean it is possible.
There is no answer to this. Jellyfish, as do humans, come in all different shapes and sizes.
The jellyfish live in jellyfish fields.
Yes, the box jellyfish IS a true jellyfish.