Yes, but they are deep water jellyfish that humans are unlikely to encounter.
They have thousands of small tentacles.
They let out a tissue like form that protects them.
Benthocodon reproduces by releasing eggs and sperm into the water during mass spawning events. Fertilization occurs externally, and the resulting larvae develop into young medusae before settling and metamorphosing into adult benthocodon.
A bee sting injects formic acid, which is considered a weak acid. It can cause pain and irritation at the site of the sting.
Formic acid is injected into the skin by a bee sting, causing the pain and inflammation associated with the sting.
No, stingrays have a single barb on their tail that is used for defense. Once they have used it to sting, it must be regrown if they wish to sting again.
The bee sting venom is a complex mixture of proteins etc. and is not acid.
It is sort of shaped like a hat or an Easter bonnet.
Petrophile pedunculata was created in 1810.
Colubrina pedunculata was created in 1900.
The Benthocodon is a rare species found under high levels of waters
Benthocodon reproduces by releasing eggs and sperm into the water during mass spawning events. Fertilization occurs externally, and the resulting larvae develop into young medusae before settling and metamorphosing into adult benthocodon.
it live a mile under the ocean
the diet is unknown
they both live in the darkness and have tentacles
Benthocodon, also known as the deep-sea jellyfish, is a gelatinous organism, so it doesn't have a specific weight like animals with a skeleton or exoskeleton. They are very delicate and often fragile, residing deep in the ocean where weight doesn't play the same role as it does on land.
it is unposibe that sting could have a sting tail
They sting people.
Well, wasp sting is more poisonous than bee sting