The floats are of two sorts-ones that face left and others that are angled toward the right. Even the gas float itself is a modified colony member. Some zooids are specialised for stinging and capturing fishes and other marine animals, some are specialised for eating prey, and some are the reproductive members of the colony. The individual members, or 'zooids', cooperate to form what looks to us like one animal-a jellyfish. The gas-filled float supports a number of specialised tentacles, which are actually members of a complicated colony. Other behaviours and adaptationsīluebottles differ from true jellyfishes in several ways. Stinging capsules contain a toxic mixture of phenols and proteins that is injected into the victim through a terminal pore in the thread. The tube is usually armed with spines or barbs that aid in the penetration of, and anchorage in, the victim's flesh. When the stinging capsule is stimulated the tube shoots outward turning itself right side out. The opening left in the surface of the capsule is covered by a hinged lid held down by a hairlike trigger. Each is a hollow sphere with its external wall turned in at one point as a long, hollow, coiled thread or tube turned outside in. Nematocysts are among the most complex intracellular structures known and may be only 0.001 mm in diameter. The prey consists mostly of small crustaceans and other members of the surface plankton which it ensnares in a tangle of nematocyst threads. Muscles in the tentacle contract and drag prey into range of the digestive polyps. As Physalia drifts downwind, the long tentacle fishes continuously through the water. The most impressive members of the colony are the tentacles. They digest the food by secreting a full range of enzymes that variously break down proteins, carbohydrates and fats. The resting polyp measures only 1-2 mm in diameter but the mouth may expand to more than 20 mm. Once attached they become all mouth, spreading out over the surface of the morsel. The digestive polyps are the 'stomachs' of the colony and respond quickly to the presence of food, wriggling and twisting until they fasten their flexible mouths to it. Feeding and dietīluebottles feed mostly on larval fish, molluscs and small crustaceans such as copepods and amphipods. Both of these species possess fishing tentacles with stinging capsules that have no effect on humans.Ĭommonly encountered in the summer months on the eastern coast of Australia, and during Autumn and winter in southern Western Australia. The float of Porpita is a flat, circular disc up to 2.5 cm across with many gas-filled tubes, but no sail. It is about 5 cm across with a slender diagonal sail, allowing the animal to sail at an angle to the wind. The float of Velella is a flat, oval disc with many gas-filled tubes. Two other floating colonial cnidarians which may be found with Bluebottles are the By-the-wind sailor ( Velella) and the blue-green Porpita pacifica. The Bluebottle belongs to the phylum Cnidaria, which includes corals and sea anemones. Thus, if the sailing angle of one form leads to its stranding on the shore, the others sailing to the opposite side of the wind may escape. The float may project either to the left or to the right the left-handed forms sail to the right of the wind and vice versa. Physalia sails at a slight angle downwind and the course is determined by the curvature of the float and the underwater resistance of the rest of the colony. The float has aerodynamic properties and it seems likely that sailing characteristics may be modified by muscular contraction of the crest. It is a living, muscular bag that secretes its own gas, which is similar to air. It is mainly blue, though its upper margin may show delicate shades of green or pink. The float is a bottle or pear-shaped sac that can exceed 15 cm.
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