They eat other jellies such as the comb jelly. They also eat plankton.
humans that live in Japanese and chienese
chelonia mydas eat seaweed and algae, but they can also eat sea creatures like jellyfish, comb jellies, crayfish, and also crabs.
It depends on how long the polyp lives, because the polyp creates the baby jellyfish. If it gets killed after letting off one batch of jellies, you can expect somewhere in between 8-16 new jellies. but usually, polyps live long enough to make several new batches of jellies. Also, a polyp may bud off another polyp, which will also begin making new jellies. So one jellyfish may make hundreds or thousands of new jellies. Of course, not all of them survive.(Just to let you know, polyps finish growing baby jellies roughly yearly)
It only depends on the type of chicken you have and in what area you live in. If you live in states with very cold winters and the chickens have large combs,then it should be decombed to stop frost bite. NO You do not have to remove a chickens comb and you should not. Removing the comb off a chicken is absolutely not necessary, anywhere. The comb has two functions. The primary function of the comb is to cool the chicken down in the summer. It is like a small radiator and blood flows close to the surface of the comb, air passing over the comb will remove some of the radiated heat and cool the blood as it passes through. Chickens do not sweat, taking off the comb would be like covering yourself in plastic wrap and sitting in the hot sun. The other function for the comb is to attract a mate. A healthy comb on either gender indicates potentially good genetic quality recognized by potential mates.
Comb jellies are pretty they breed babies.
The scientific name for comb jellies is Ctenophora.
Comb jellies.
Comb jellies.
ctenophora
Ctenophores (comb jellies) are a separate phylum from Cnidaria.
Animalia
with there mouth dah
Comb jellies are somewhat different from true jellies (cnidarians). They lack stinging nematocysts and have developed other strategies to feed and protect themselves. Some of these include oral lobes to capture prey and sticky tentacles.
They eat other jellies such as the comb jelly. They also eat plankton.
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Due to their similarities, it was originally considered that both comb jellies and cnidarians went in the Phylum Coelenterata. However, these days, comb jellies are considered as Phylum Ctenophora and cnidarians as a separate phylum Phylum Cnidaria. Cnidaria includes box jellies, jellyfish, hydra, sea anemones and corals.