Jellyfish
It is a jellyfish-like marine creature, also known as the Bluebottle. They have venomous tentacles that can give a painful sting.
Portuguese Man-of-War jellyfish are also known as bluebottles.
In The Old Man and the Sea, Santiago the fisherman views the Portuguese man-of-war as a beautiful but dangerous creature of the sea. He respects its ability to survive in the harsh ocean environment, but also recognizes the threat it poses with its venomous tentacles.
Jellyfish, Portuguese man of war, sea wasps.
Because it is known to man kind that it will always be a scary creature
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.
The blue bottle jellyfish, known as the portuguese man of war, has stinging tentacles that can paralyze small fish or plankton to death. Their stings are rarely fatal to humans, but their stings have been known extremely painful enough to cause lung and heart problems along with shocks.
A Portuguese Man'o War, Physalia physalis, is the best known siphonophore hydrozoan cnidarian. It is a colonial cnidarian that floats at the surface of tropical and subtropical oceans by means of a highly modified, gas-filled polyp. It is also infamous for its powerful venomous sting.