Jellyfish help to stir up the ocean as they move, researchers have found.
Using a green dye, scientists showed how the animals' umbrella-shaped bodies were a key factor in this mixing.
The distribution of heat, nutrients and chemicals helps maintain the marine environment and has an important influence on global climate.
Reporting in the journal Nature, the researchers said that marine animals of many shapes and sizes contributed to ocean turbulence.
Charles Darwin, grandson of the famous British naturalist, first discovered that animals stir up the oceans more than 50 years ago.
The influence of this "biogenic" or "Darwinian" mixing on the ocean environment has been under debate since then.
The wind and tides play a big part in mixing the oceans, but this study suggests that the role of biogenic mixing could be more significant than previously thought.
The research showed how small creatures - as well as very large sea mammals - create turbulence.
"This is important because the other proposed mechanism was simply that large animals stirred up the water as they swam," explained lead author John Dabiri from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech).
He and his colleague Kakani Katija showed exactly how jellyfish, which were between one and 10cm in diameter, "dragged water around" as they moved, demonstrating the effect by squirting a dye in front of the creatures.
The team had to dive with the jellyfish to demonstrate the effect
But, Dr Dabiri explained, the jellyfish were unlikely to be the "primary ocean mixers".
"Crustaceans - like copepods and krill - are likely the primary biogenic mixers, because there are so many of them," he explained. "We used jellyfish here, because of their uniform shape - and because they were relatively easy to study."
The principle behind the effect, Dr Dabiri explained, was aerodynamics. "When the animal is at depth, it will carry some of the colder, deeper water with it as it migrates upwards," he said.
"The shape of the animal is important, because the more streamlined it is, the less of a disturbance it causes. So a bullet-shaped animal will carry less water with it than a flatter, saucer-shaped animal."
Jonathan Sharples, principal researcher from the UK's Proudman Oceanographic Laboratory told BBC News that this mechanism was likely to be important in specific areas where there was a high density of marine life.
"In warmer surface water there are virtually no nutrients, and the transport of nutrients from the bottom water is very important for the single-cell plants that live there," he said.
"But much of the open ocean is like desert," he added, "and the density of these animals is unlikely to be sufficient (to cause mixing)."
The next step, Dr Dabiri said, was to find out where in the ocean, the phenomenon of biogenic mixing has the biggest effect.
Jellyfish live in both the shallow waters of the ocean and the deep parts of the ocean. They can live in warm or cold water.
Most Jellyfish do but some do live in fresh water! There is a place on this island that has fresh water jellyfish you can swim with them my mom has!
Jellyfish can be found in every ocean in the world. They can live in warm or cold ocean waters and in deep or shallow waters. Some jellyfish can even live in fresh water.
I know they can live in bays but bays are part of the ocean so idk sorry
Cannonball jellyfish live in warm, estuarian waters. They are found in the mid-west Atlantic Ocean and in the east-central and northwest Pacific Ocean.
they live in the ocean. If it gets to hot they just dive down to cooler waters.
Jellyfish live floating in the oceans of Earth and occur at all latitudes. There is no specific climate to which they are restricted but their numbers follow their main food source (plankton) which blooms in the summer season north and south.
The sea nettle jellyfish are mostly found in the Atlantic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean. They prefer to be in the colder ocean waters.
Jellyfish like the tropics and cold water. They live at the seashore because of the ocean temperature in the water.
No, Jellyfish are pelagic organisms, this means that they live floating about in the upper layers of the open ocean, and while they can swim up and down in the water they are carried around in the ocean by water currents.
In the ocean............. Jellyfish can be found everywhere! From the Arctic ocean to the bottom of the Pacific ocean to some of the shores of all seas. Every sea and ocean contains a species of jellyfish.
The Crystal jellyfish lives in open waters