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While certain jellyfish are more common, sometimes a stray shows up. For example, recently lion’s mane jellyfish, which pack ...
Tis' the season to build a pc - after all the food anyway. Let James soothe you today with a build he did for Christmas - ...
James is looking at the cheapest 240mm aio cooler we have ever reviewed - the Cougar Aqua 240. Coming in at less than £55 ...
We went to Arctic Norway We stayed in a nine-room hotel on a tiny, rocky, car-free island west of Bodø in Arctic Norway. It's the ultimate in-nature getaway, a place where you can hear yourself ...
Comb jellies are found all around the world in coastal waters and the deep ocean. Though they look similar to jellyfish, they don’t sting and belong to a different phylum, Ctenophora, which is ...
There is evidence to suggest that the comb jellyfish was the first animal to appear on Earth some 700 million years ago. RLS Photo – stock.adobe.com ...
While studying comb jellies in a different tank, University of Bergen natural historian Joto J. Soto-Angel noticed that an adult ctenophore, also the species M. leidyi, had vanished from his tank ...
Comb jellies, or ctenophores, are voracious predators in fragile bodies. They are the largest animals that swim with cilia, which are lined up in rows known as combs, and they feed on a wide range ...
In this video shared by the researcher, the two fused comb jellies can be seen contracting their muscles in sync. (Mariana Rodriguez-Santiago/CC by-SA) Using the sea to soak up our excess carbon ...
To test their theory, the investigators injured comb jellies by removing partial lobes from individual comb jellies, then put the animals together in close pairs. In nine of ten cases, the pairs of ...
Comb jellies, technically known as ctenophores, are one of the weirdest creatures on Earth. They appeared in the seas over half a billion years ago and have maintained to the present day the comb ...