The number of species of represented in the zooplankton of the sea is considerably enriched by the distinctive dispersal stages of many marine animals that spend their adult lives in the littoral or the benthos. To differing extents, these larvae (the amphiblastulae of sponges, the medusae and ephyrae of the cnidarian coelenterates, the pilidia of nemerteans, the trochospheres of polychaetes, the cypris larvae of cirripedes, the phyllosomae and zoeae of the eucarid malacostraca, the veligers of the lamellibranch mollusks, the various auriculariae, bipinnariae, and plutei of the echinoderms and the appendicularian larvae of the ascideans; (see Table II) share the diminutive size ranges, membranous translucence, and feeble swimming movements characteristic of the species which are planktonic throughout their lives. Among the smallest (20 mm, perhaps to 2 m). Though some of these are rather larger than some of the swimming organisms (“nekton”: fish, cephalopods) that are excluded from the understanding of “plankton” (discussed earlier), the large jellyfish qualify for their poor ability to control their own movements in the sea. The siphonophores, like Velella and the Portuguese man o'war, Physalis physalis, are little more than drifting “polyp colonies.” The true jelly-fish, which move themselves by slow, rhythmic pulsation of the umbrella-like manubrium, include the distinctive Aurelia, Cyanea, and Pelagia.
Finally, the young stages of several species of pelagic fish are of such diminutive size and swim so feebly and with weakness of motility that, for the first part of their lives, they are reasonably included among the plankton: Clupeids (herrings, sardines) and Scombrids (Mackerel) fulfill this description; ultimately demersal Gadids (cods and allies) and benthic flat fish (Pleuronectids, Soleids) also pass planktonic dispersal stages.
Jellyfish primarily use meiosis for reproduction. During meiosis, the jellyfish's cells divide to create sex cells that have half the number of chromosomes, allowing for genetic diversity in offspring. Mitosis, on the other hand, is the process of cell division for growth and repair.
Yes, anything which produces a zygote goes through meiosis.
Hermit crabs use meiosis to reproduce
You should use meat tenderizer for a jellyfish sting.
The English popular name jellyfish has been in use since 1796.
acually,,,, jellyfish use their tentacles to get their food
their tenticles
No.
to eat
Jellyfish use stinging cells to protect themselves & catch food
They swim around the ocen and use it for how all other animals use energy
if your reding this your sad :/