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  • [♩INTRO]

  • I don't think you're ready for this jelly.

  • Sure, it looks kind of unassuming,

  • what with it's strange habit of hanging out, wrong-way up on the seafloor.

  • But it can sting you without actually touching you.

  • That's all thanks to the stinging snot rockets it launches into the water above.

  • Yes, I said stinging snot rockets.

  • I told you you weren't ready.

  • Cassiopea xamachana, better known as the upside-down jelly,

  • spends its life in still, coastal waters, nestled in near the roots of mangrove trees.

  • It uses its bell like a suction cup to anchor itself to the bottom.

  • So in a way, it acts more like its distant cousin the sea anemone than a proper jelly.

  • It does this because its tentacles contain symbiotic algae called zooxanthellae

  • which use light and carbon dioxide to make food for the jelly.

  • And in return for providing these yums,

  • the algae get a cozy home with one heck of a security system.

  • Upside-down jellies are still jellies, after all,

  • and they have potent stinging cells called nematocysts.

  • In addition to warding off threats,

  • these stingers allow the jellies to add some variety to their diet,

  • in the form of small critters like brine shrimp that swim about in the waters above them.

  • The jellies don't saunter up to grab their meals, though.

  • They send stingers to them.

  • For decades, people swimming in areas with these jellies have reported

  • inexplicable patches ofstinging water”,

  • and scientists have long noted clouds of mucus hovering above the jellies,

  • but they hadn't taken a close look at what was going on.

  • Not until 2016 anyway,

  • when aquarists with the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History

  • collected some of the mucus that upside-down jellies

  • in their care released during feedings and stuck it under a microscope.

  • To their surprise, they saw tiny specks racing around in it.

  • And when they added brine shrimp,

  • the specks kept bumping into them like mini go-karts.

  • Lethal go karts, that is, because the shrimp were killed on contact.

  • Upon closer examination, the team discovered these specks had an outer layer

  • composed of stinging cells and wiggling, hair-like projections called cilia

  • which help them move around in the mucus.

  • And inside were living zooxanthellaebasically, a solar-powered energy pack!

  • They dubbed these swimming structures cassiosomes,

  • and the team believes they're used as a long-range weapon.

  • Basically, the jellies can ooze a cloud of cassiosome-filled mucus

  • up to 20 centimeters high into the water above them.

  • That, presumably, kills lots of tasty little morsels.

  • Then, they can then slowly suck the dead into their mouths.

  • The researchers also discovered that the cassisomes themselves can survive up

  • to 10 days, which could explain those mysterious patches of stinging water.

  • If some of this mucus gets churned up into the water column

  • say, by the kicks of a snorkeler's fins

  • then there could be little stinging snot rockets zooming around

  • long after the actual jelly has moved on.

  • And, it turns out, it's not just this one species.

  • The team discovered similar cassiosomes in four of its relatives

  • including ones that don't chill on the bottom.

  • They believe cassiosomes evolved in this lineage of jellies, the Rhizostomeae,

  • to give them a bit of extra firepower.

  • And it's clearly served them well, as they're the most diverse order of true jellies.

  • Is it me, or do jellies just get more amazing the more we learn about them?!

  • Thanks for watching SciShow!

  • If you enjoyed learning about these weirdly wonderful cnidarians,

  • you'll probably enjoy our episode on their cousins, hydras,

  • and how they can live forever.

  • We also put out a new science video every day!

  • And you catch every episode by clicking that subscribe button

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  • [♩OUTRO]

[♩INTRO]

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