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 楼主: 雪儿|查看: 1399|回复: 23
[其他

Jellyfish

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11#
 楼主|雪儿 发表于: 2011-7-8 10:50:31|只看该作者

Jelly-Riding Crab

Photograph by Hannah Johnson, My Shot



A crab clings to its floating host as both are swept out to sea near Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina. One role jellyfish play in the marine ecosystem is the transport of other animals across the ocean.
12#
 楼主|雪儿 发表于: 2011-7-8 10:50:41|只看该作者
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Jellyfish Lake, Palau

Photograph by Tim Laman, National Geographic



Marine scientists warn that Earth’s oceans may look increasingly like this image—teeming with ever growing populations of jellyfish. Overfishing has eliminated many of the jellies’ natural predators and competitors, while climate change is warming water temperatures to levels preferred by the invertebrates. The combination, scientists say, could produce future seas simply saturated with jellyfish.
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13#
 楼主|雪儿 发表于: 2011-7-8 10:50:59|只看该作者

Get Wallpaper

Mosaic Jellyfish

Photograph by Melissa Fiene, My Shot

A mosaic jellyfish floats serenely in the waters of the Coral Sea, about 100 nautical miles from Cairns, Australia. Jellyfish are ubiquitous in the Earth’s oceans. They can thrive in warm water and cold, along coastlines or out in the deep. Their bodies are about 95 percent water. And though they have no brains, jellyfish have somehow been smart enough to survive for over 500 million years.

14#
 楼主|雪儿 发表于: 2011-7-8 10:51:17|只看该作者

Moon Jellyfish

Photograph by David Doubilet, National Geographic



These translucent jellyfish are named for their resemblance to Earth’s satellite—but the species has had an otherworldly experience. In 1991 moon jellies flew aboard the space shuttle Columbia during a study on weightlessness and the development of juvenile jellyfish. Here on Earth, the jellies are commonly found in warm ocean waters worldwide.
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15#
 楼主|雪儿 发表于: 2011-7-8 10:53:11|只看该作者

Purple-Striped Jellyfish

Photograph by David Doubilet, National Geographic



A large, purple-striped jellyfish floats in the waters of California’s Monterey Bay, where they sometimes arrive en masse. This jelly can grow up to three feet (one meter) in diameter and appear rather formidable. But its stinging tentacles are used to bring in mostly smaller prey, including zooplankton, larval fish, and fish eggs.
16#
 楼主|雪儿 发表于: 2011-7-8 10:53:27|只看该作者

Jellyfish in Lagoon

Photograph by David Doubilet, National Geographic



With a distinctive pulsing motion, a jellyfish makes its way through the waters of a Pacific lagoon. Most jellyfish tend to simply drift along with prevailing currents. But some use more active methods of self-propulsion, including shooting a stream of water from their mouths. A jellyfish also uses its large, central mouth to consume food and expel waste.
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17#
 楼主|雪儿 发表于: 2011-7-8 10:53:38|只看该作者

Pacific Coast Jellyfish

Photograph by Paola Carolina Smania, My Shot



Jellyfish use their dangling tentacles, equipped with hollow, harpoonlike darts loaded with neurotoxins, to sting fish, shrimp, or crabs. The strike leaves its victim stunned for easier consumption. Humans can also receive a painful sting from these toxic tentacles, even those belonging to beached or dead jellyfish. In the case of a few species, like Australia’s notorious box jellyfish, stings can be fatal.
18#
 楼主|雪儿 发表于: 2011-7-8 10:53:51|只看该作者

Lion’s Mane Jellyfish

Photograph by Paul Nicklen, National Geographic



A curious yet cautious diver approaches a lion’s mane jellyfish off the British Columbia coast. The tentacles that make up this jelly’s “mane” can deliver a painful and even potentially fatal sting. But such toxins don’t deter several fish species from feeding on the ample bulk of the cold water-loving jellyfish.
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19#
 楼主|雪儿 发表于: 2011-7-8 10:54:02|只看该作者

Comb Jelly

Photograph by Jason Edwards, National Geographic



Ctenophores are commonly called comb jellies because they use rows of hairlike cilia to propel themselves through the water. This unique physiology also causes comb jellies to refract light, so they often shine with a rainbow of iridescent color. In the absence of sunlight, comb jellies can still be colorful, if less vivid. Most species are bioluminescent.
20#
 楼主|雪儿 发表于: 2011-7-8 10:54:13|只看该作者

Mastigias Jellyfish

Photograph by Tim Laman, National Geographic



Does this humble jellyfish help determine Earth’s climate? Studies of these Mastigias jellies in a landlocked Palau lake recently prompted scientists to suggest that the motion of sea animals plays a major role in seawater mixing. Winds and tides are major ocean mixers but sea creatures—including jellyfish—may account for as much as a third of the total, the study suggests. That would mean jellies are significant drivers of ocean circulation patterns and thus help to determine Earth’s climate.
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