Animal Unique | Atlantic Sea Nettle | Atlantic sea nettle known as the East Coast sea nettle. It's a kind of jellyfish that inhabits estuaries Atlantic. It is smaller than the Pacific sea nettle, and has more color variable but usually pale pink or yellowish, often with bright colored stripes on the deeper exumbrella, especially near the margin. Sea nettles live on both sides of the Atlantic, Indian Ocean, and in the eastern Pacific Ocean. The Atlantic sea nettle is radially symmetrical, marine, and carnivorous. Her mouth is located in the center of one end of the body, which opens to a gastro vascular cavity used for digestion. It has tentacles that surround the mouth to catch food.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Cnidaria
Subphylum: Medusozoa
Class: Scyphozoa
Order: Semaeostomeae
Family: Pelagiidae
Genus: Chrysaora
Species: C. quinquecirrha
Swimming bell of the Atlantic sea nettles up to 10 inches (25 centimeters) in diameter, but most are much smaller sea nettles. The edges of the pool are bell-shaped petal. A large tentacle comes out between the leaves, and twice as many small tentacles emerge from under the petals. Eight sense alternative structures are present in spaces between the petals. The narrow oral arms are long and thin. The colors of Medusae vary from milky white to white with purple-red stripes radiating to the bell.
Atlantic sea nettle medusae swim continuously in slow circles. They constantly feed. The life cycle of sea nettles have both a polyp and a medusa stage. The release of eggs and sperm takes place around dawn. Stinging sea nettles are carnivorous. They generally feed on zooplankton, ctenophores, other jellies, and sometimes crustaceans. Nettles immobilize and obtain their prey using their stinging tentacles. Then the prey is transported to the gastro-vascular cavity where it is later consumed. Nettles also eat young minnows, bay anchovy eggs, worms and mosquito larvae.
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