Meet Your New Jellyfish Overlords

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  • wa3zrm
    Member
    • May 2009
    • 4436

    #1

    Meet Your New Jellyfish Overlords

    — You Won't Like Them Much
    Marin News ^ |

    Jellyfish are taking over the world, scientists say. They are reproducing too much and not dying enough. They are clogging up power plants. They are messing with fishing hauls. They are making it unpleasant to swim at beaches. The nature of that unpleastness ranges from mild discomfort to death.
    Here are some of the things worth loving and fearing about jellyfish — the strange, beautiful creatures from the deep that may soon rule us all.
    1. They have crazy anatomy
    Jellyfish are very cool, biologically. They don't have brains. They don't have hearts. They are mostly water. You're going to want read up on your Jellyfish anatomy, locomotion, and life cycle to prepare for their imminent world domination. Start by consulting this chart so you know what part of the jellyfish is eating you and what part is stinging you.
    2. They do color well
    Jellyfish look awesome in aquarium tanks that have colorful lights. In these tanks, they entrance us with their beauty and lull us into a false sense that we are their masters. Moon Jellyfish look especially cool.
    Like these little guys at the Beijing Aquarium. (Interesting color choice, China. I see what you did there.)
    Here's a subtly lit friend at the Stralsund Oceanarium in Germany:
    This jelly at the Grand Aquarium of Saint-Malo in Western France seems too beautiful to be plotting your destruction. Right? Wrong.
    Hopefully the lighting will be nice when jellyfish put us in tanks for their viewing pleasure. 3. There so many different kinds!
    There are so many different kinds of jellyfish. When their powers combine... Here's a Lion’s Mane jellyfish, looking like a bad hair day off Farne Island, England.
    If you have any problems with my posts or signature


  • Grim
    Member
    • Jun 2008
    • 850

    #2
    Also Japanese fisherman were once told to cut up jellyfish when in their nets.

    They soon realized that the number of jellyfish were increasing each year.

    Come to find out that the jellyfish were mass spawning as they were being killed as a natural self preservation mechanism. Thus their numbers were increasing due to being killed and then disposed of overboard.

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