Jellyfish development occurs in multiple phases. Sperm fertilize eggs which develop into larval planulae, become polyps, bud into ephyrae and then transform into adult medusae. In some species, specimens may skip some phases.
The man of war is not a jellyfish it is 4 different polyps living together
Jellyfish have two stages to their lives. Once they have mated the fertilized eggs settle on the sea floor and develop into small, sessile, polyps. Then some time later these polyps will start budding, each bud will turn into a free swimming miniature jellyfish that becomes part of the plankton and then grows bigger to look like the adult.
Collective nouns for jellyfish are:a bloom of jellyfish (When jellyfish are spawned from their polyps they form what is called a "bloom".)a brood of jellyfisha fluther of jellyfisha smack of jellyfisha smuck of jellyfisha smuth of jellyfisha stuck of jellyfisha swarm of jellyfishA fluther or a smuth of jellyfish.A group of jellyfish is called a smack of jellyfish.
This jellyfish actully isn't a jellyfish they are a Siphonophore, that meanis it's made up of 4 different colonies of polyps. The navigation colonie helps but the wind mostly does all the work to make it move.
No but crystal jellyfish do. Crystals reproduce by alternating between asexual benthic polyps and seasonal planktonic medusae.
no
Jellyfish are all transparent because they have mesoglea, which is a translucent, inert, jelly-like substance that makes up most of the bodies of jellyfish. They all reproduce using polyps, meaning they send out larvae. And they all have gyroscope vision,
A jellyfish protects Zygotes by Stinging anything that will try to harm it
No.
Jellyfish use stinging cells to protect themselves & catch food
They don't protect their young they have to do it by themselves