yar man dood
Portuguese Man-of-War jellyfish are also known as bluebottles.
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, they can and it is just a natural habit. It doesn't make them ill.
bluebottle jellyfish do not have backbones. in fact, all jellyfish do not have backbones. even though they are called jellyFISH they are invertebrates.
Bluebottles, also known as Portuguese man o' war, primarily feed on small fish, plankton, and other small marine organisms. They capture their prey using their long tentacles, which contain specialized cells called nematocysts that deliver a painful sting. The stinging cells immobilize the prey, allowing the bluebottle to digest it. In addition to live prey, they may also consume detritus and organic matter in their environment.
They are a scavengers and predators so they are carniverous
Calliphoridae (also called blow-flies, carrion flies, bluebottles, greenbottles, or cluster flies) are pollinators but their larvae are scavengers.Thus attracting the fly to both red and green colors (resembles rotten meat) and yellow and white that resembles flowers.They do not seem to be attracted to blue colors.
The Portugese man of war jellyfish is actally quite small, about three inches or so with a sail like arrangement that allows it to be blown in the direction of the wind which is often toward the shore in large numbers, where they can inflict a very painful sting. In South Africa they are called Bluebottles because of their light blue colour.
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.