Preview

Crystal Jelly Fish

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
438 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Crystal Jelly Fish
Crystal jellyfish
The Crystal jelly fish is a very unique marine animal. Known as the crystal jellyfish its scientific name is well known to be the Aquarium Victoria. The Aquaria Victoria is a saucer shaped Hydromedusa with a well developed velum, its size ranges within five to twelve centimeters in diameter. It has eighty or more narrow unbranched radial canals witch can extend to the margin of the bell. All tentacles extend from the margin of the bell, making the slender gonads run along most of the length of the canals. Placed into a single row the tentacles are surrounded to the all around shape of the bell. The Aquaria Victoria is placed in pelagic waters in the Pacific Ocean from Vancouver, British Columbia, and Central California. There living requirements intake open waters and require temperatures between forty degrease Fahrenheit .Many Aquaria Victoria can be found swimming or floating along the shores. The population of the Aquaria Victoria is said to be unknown, because of there four to six month life span it decreases’ the chances of finding the information. The Aquaria Victoria is budded off into hydroid colonies in the late spring. The Medusa is the first stage of its vast development. When approximately reaching three centimeters it can begin producing gametes of reproduction. The Spermatozoa and egg mature daily in the medusa. When provided much food they are spawned into the water column, settled off to fertilize they are then eventually settling out for a new hydro id colony. When reaching its growth of development to eat it intakes Crustacean, Zoo plankton core pods and crab zoeals. The natural Predators’ of the Aquaria Victoria are Voracious protozoan known as the lion mane jelly. When approached by one or more of there predators they tend to glow only to send out threats to protect themselves. The Aquaria Victoria is capable of its glow due to the (GFP) Green fluorescent protein it produces. The Aquaria Victoria only glows around the margin

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Marine organisms that have a larvae stage dependent on wind waves to move and settle in an environment, where they develop to adults and recruit. The Mytilus californianus has a larvae stage and as the waves break into the surface of the pier pilings in Santa Monica, the larvae stick to the hard substrate that the vertical columns provide. The random placement of the larvae on the pier piling is what determines how much stress and nutrients that individual larvae will receive as it develops to an adult. Studies conducted in a lab with different mussel species have shown that growth is determined by the nutrients it receives and the quality of nutrients…

    • 1472 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    8. What is the other form of a jellyfish pictured here called and how is it different from the polyp form?…

    • 680 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    There was a time in history when the oceans were overly polluted with trash of various sorts. The water was so polluted and the food source for the ocean life was diminishing. This was the habitat of the blowfish. Their food became so scarce they began to eat the very things that were polluting the waters. The blowfish began to mutate with what they were eating. The Bottle Blowfish came to be from a mutation between a plastic bottle and its consumer, the blowfish.…

    • 311 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Daphnia Experiment

    • 654 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Daphnia, also known as the water flea are planktonic crustaceans that are found in lakes, ponds, and streams. They received “their common name from their jerky movement through the water” (Clare). They are also “very small, usually 2-5mm long, with an overall shape similar to a kidney bean” (Elenbaas). Daphnia play an important role in the freshwater food chains and serve as food for other freshwater organisms such as fish. They are also commonly used to test for chemical toxicity in water. Since Daphnia have transparent body, it is easier to observe their heart rates, and other visceral organ systems. Its small heart rate is easily visible when viewed under a microscope. A change in its heart rate plays a crucial role in determining whether…

    • 654 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The primary swimming form of the Orangespotted Sunfish is labriform because they row their pectoral fins, an oscillatory fin motion. The mouth of these fish are terminal and moderately large. A terminal mouth allows this species to be a benthic and surface feeder. Their gill rakers are long and slender with space between them. This allows for particles in the water that flow into the mouth of the fish that they do not want to eat, to flush out. It indicates that the food of this fish is medium to large sized compared to their body. This correlates with an omnivorous diet and the ability to consume small and large prey. Daphnia and Cyclops are crustaceans often found in this species’ diet. Also, they help with mosquito control by feeding on mosquito larvae. The eyes of the Orangespotted Sunfish are corrected for spherical aberration, meaning they are a visual fish and need sight to find their prey. Since their prey is small fish and crustaceans, good eyesight is important to find them in the murky water that they live in. The Orangespotted Sunfish has adapted traits to better thrive in it’s…

    • 886 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    What I learned. I learned the differences between transgender, transexual, and transvestite (cross-dressing). Jennifer Boylan made it understood that she is a “male-to-female transexual” and not a transvestite. She said that the word transvestite sounds “creepy” and bug-like. She believes that it is not about dressing up like a female but mentally and physically feeling like one.…

    • 1048 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Natural Selection is the environments’ favoring of a particular trait in a population. Organisms use many different methods to adapt to their environments. In this experiment one must use brine shrimp and salt water solutions to represent organisms and their environments. Some organisms like the brine shrimp adapt to changes in their environments. Brine shrimp eggs produce cysts when their environmental conditions aren’t being cooperative. Brine shrimp eggs grow hard and brown when their environment does not have enough oxygen to support them. This also happens when there is too much salt content in their environment. When the eggs become hard and brown, they can be kept for long periods of time in a dry, oxygen- free environment. When the cyst is returned to its normal environment, it continues on with its development and eventually hatches. Brine shrimp are the perfect organisms to do experiments on because they only require a short time for development. The person conducting the experiment must use 5 beakers, each with different amounts of salt in them. The point of the experiment is to see how the brine shrimp eggs respond in each dish of salt concentrate. Once the salt and water have been combined, one must place approximately twenty brine shrimp on a microscope slide. After twenty four hours, some of the brine shrimp eggs should have hatched while some have partially hatched or not hatched yet. This must be done at the twenty four hour mark and the forty eight hour mark. The data should be written down on the chart given in the experiment papers. The hatching viability must be found by adding the number of hatched eggs at twenty four hours and the hatched eggs at forty eight hours and dividing it by the initial amount of eggs placed in the petri dish.…

    • 339 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Rock Candy Crystals

    • 976 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Crystals are formed when atoms line up in patterns and solidify. There are crystals everywhere — in the form of salt, sugar, sand, diamonds, quartz, and many more!…

    • 976 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bonnie Bassler Analysis

    • 494 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Dr. Basslers observed a symbiosis relationship between Vibrio Fischeri and the Bobtail squid. Viberio Fisheri is bioluminescent bacteria which means it produces light. The Bobtail squid is a nocturnal animal which sleeps in the sand in shallow water in Hawaii. At night time where plentiful starlight is…

    • 494 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Blue Crab

    • 759 Words
    • 4 Pages

    When hermit crab eggs hit salt water, they immediately open to produce small larvae-like or plankton swimming creatures called zoea. They develop by in stages, each stage lasting about a week. At each molt, they grow larger and add more appendages.…

    • 759 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ecological Succession Lab

    • 736 Words
    • 3 Pages

    We identified the eubranchipus, a organism with similar characteristics to one of a shrimp. Another name for it would be the fairy shrimp. During this observation, only two eubranchipus were identified. We did not have as many eubranchipus as the other groups but we were able to put one under the microscope. This organism has very fast movement and many legs. Another observation we made was that they swim upside down instead of right side up. Bothe of he fairy shrimps were translucent. The colors of them are determined by the food supply of their environment. These organisms started off as dried out eggs but as soon was we added tap water, it made food sources available in order to survive , therefore allowing the eggs to hatch. On the fifth observation, one of our eubranchipus died as another one grew bigger. The surviving shrimp started off as being 0.8 cm and increased to 1.2 cm. This is probably because of the lack of resources and competition - survival of the fittest. Less protist of the same size were found and the water was more still due to the limited organisms living in it. The population of protists are decreasing because it is the food source of the eubranchipus (also cynobacteria). Again, this is because of the existence of a food…

    • 736 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Imagine this. There are glowing lights all around a ship in the middle of the ocean. An 18th-century sailor would most likely think that a monster was surrounding the ship—ready to ingest it and all the people onboard. Today, we know that the lights come from the phosphorescent glow of jellyfish. Although swarms of jellyfish can be beautiful, they can also be a central part of an ecological disaster in the making.” These sentences are quoted from writer Rosalind Fonem. She wrote about the effects of growing jellyfish population in her story called “Jellyfish Take Over”. The study of jellyfish population does, in fact, make her story true. In seas everywhere, the overpopulation of jellyfish has caused many fishermen to be out of jobs, power to be shut down because of clogged pipes, and fish population to decrease. But recent studies have shown that there is in…

    • 451 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    I found your book “The Thing About Jellyfish” really interesting. Something that I liked about it is the fact that Suzy went through a lot just to learn everything about and how her friend died. My favorite character is probably Suzy’s mom, probably just because she seems like a cool mom that would support their kid a lot. She’s pretty much an ideal mother. My favorite part of the book has to be when Suzy’s mom told her about franny’s death, it’s my favorite part not because it was sad but because of how you wrote the emotion in the book and it helped people kinda feel it in real life it was pretty powerful. I think that a sequel to this book would be cool, I think that if you did it would have to be about how Suzy affected the world with her…

    • 168 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    When one makes the choice to install a saltwater aquarium in their home, all the prospects can be overwhelming. Much thought must go into the setup and upkeep of an aquarium in one’s home. It is important to make wise choices in regards to the tank itself, as well as all the other components that will become a part of the marine environment. By making wise decisions, the aquarium owner can take steps to ensure not only the health of the fish, but his own personal enjoyment.…

    • 2172 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fish

    • 951 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Even though many people have regrets, you have to realize you can’t hold them in if you want to move on. In “The Isabel Fish” by Julie Orringer Sage and Maddy lost their friend, Isabel, and both siblings have regrets about it. So to cope with their loss they both fight with each other and ever blame each other for Isabel’s death. Even though Maddy and Sage have been fighting for months, once they communicate with each other about their regrets, they are able to put their problems aside because they realized Isabel’s death was not their fault.…

    • 951 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics