Chrysaora achlyos

Chrysaora achlyos

Black sea nettle, Black jellyfish

Kingdom
Phylum
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Family
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SPECIES
Chrysaora achlyos

The black sea nettle (Chrysaora achlyos), sometimes informally known as the black jellyfish, is a species of jellyfish that can be found in the waters of the Pacific Ocean off North America. Its range is thought to be from Monterey Bay in the north, down to southern Baja California and Mexico, though there are reports of sightings as far north as British Columbia. The initial acknowledgment of the species occurred in 1997, after large groups were found on the Pacific coast.

Animal name origin

The generic name, Chrysaora, is derived from Chrysaor, the brother of Pegasus in Greek mythology. Translated literally, Chrysaor means "he who has a golden sword". The specific epithet, achylos, is constructed from the Greek achlys or akhlús (ἀχλύς), meaning "mist, darkness, and obscurity", in reference to both the species' coloration and the rarity of its sightings.

Appearance

The black sea nettle can be quite massive, with a bell diameter potentially up to 1 metre (3 ft) and oral arms extending to 5 or 6 metres (16 or 20 ft). The bell color is a distinctive opaque dark purple to nearly black, with the margin having a lighter brown reticulated pattern. No other West Coast jelly that visits nearshore waters has this dark pigmentation. Four gonads are attached to finger-like projections that extend through subumbrellar openings (the ostia). Marginal sense organs are spaced around the bell margin after every set of 3 tentacles, for a total of 8.

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Black sea nettles are occasionally seen in large numbers in surface waters off the coast of Baja California and southern California. Large swarms have occurred most recently in 1989 and 1999. During most years their whereabouts are unknown. Despite the distinctive nature of this species and its abundance when present, it was only recently officially described and is actually the largest invertebrate to have been described in the 20th century.

While sightings have been rare, when they are seen it is often as part of a massive swarm of the creatures, such as those that occurred in surface waters off the coast of Baja California and southern California in 1989, 1999 & 2010. These sightings seem to coincide with incidents of red tides, which consist of the zooplankton that black sea nettles feed upon.

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Geography

Habits and Lifestyle

Lifestyle

Diet and Nutrition

Black sea nettles are carnivorous. Their mouth is located at the center of one end of the body, which opens to a gastrovascular cavity that is used for digestion. It has tentacles that surround the mouth to capture food. Nettles have no excretory or respiratory organs. They generally feed on zooplankton and other jellyfish. Nettles immobilize and obtain their prey using their stinging tentacles.

Population

References

1. Chrysaora achlyos Wikipedia article - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrysaora_achlyos

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