prey
jellyfish have tentacles hanging down and streaming behind them in the ocean that have poisonous stingers on them, and other tentacles that grasp prey that has been stung and pulls it up into itself.
Prey
Yes, they do all the time, even though jellyfish do not have brains, their stinging tentacles are near invisible in water. Unsuspecting fish swim into these tentacles and are paralyzed by the stinging cells that the jellyfish contains which affect the nervous system. The fish is then drawn into the 'head' of the jellyfish and digested.
prey
the long stringy things at the bottom of the jelly fish are the tentacles
Yes, they catch small fish with their tentacles.
small fish that get cuaght in there tentacles.
prey
In the ocean! They use their stinging tentacles to catch small fish.
Jellyfish will prey on other jellyfish, shrimp, fish, and fish eggs. They will eat animal that drifts in to their tentacles.
Jelly fish are not true fish, so are members of a different animal class than are true, bony fishes. Jelly fish bodies are supported (or not) by hydrostatic pressure as opposed to bony skeleton.
jelly fish are capable of smell and taste by its tentacles