Jellyfish are among the most fascinating creatures in the world. Without brains, hearts, eyes, or bones, they somehow manage to survive and thrive in the ocean, arguably the harshest environment ...
A native of the western Atlantic, it presumably had been transported ... a marine zoologist at the University of British Columbia. While some jellyfish species seem to thrive on human disturbance ...
Learn about our Editorial Policies. When the animals, nicknamed elegant jellyfish, were initially collected off the coast of Japan, they were assumed to be T. formosa, a species that lives in northern ...
they traced one to Papua New Guinea and another to the Atlantic. These spineless invaders are sometimes called mangrove jellyfish, for good reason. The two species are often found together.
In a recent paper in Bioinspiration & Biomimetics, researchers at Florida Atlantic University describe the process of building and testing five free-swimming soft robotic jellyfish. The paper ...
a jellyfish species known as the ”Sea Walnut“ and normally resident in the Atlantic, was accidentally introduced into the Black Sea and had such ”overwhelming“ impact on fish populations ...