The Atlantic coast comb jellyfish probably entered the Black Sea between Europe and Asia in a boat’s bilgewater. Then it began swamping the Black Sea's prized beaches. Australian species have ...
In the 1980s a rapidly multiplying species decimated Black Sea fisheries ... In recent decades jellyfish populations in some parts of the world have boomed. In the 1980s a comb jelly that ...
“By contrast our study found jellyfish are a common prey of black-browed albatrosses and the closely related Campbell albatross. “While there was a large variation between breeding ...
However, the sea walnut, a comb jelly native ... on bioRxiv. The jellyfish's ability to reverse age may explain its success as an invasive species, first in the Black Sea and now across parts ...
A 520-million-year-old fossil resembling a flower is the great ancestor of modern-day comb jellies, jellyfish-like sea creatures that cast a rainbow-like effect as they propel their way through ocean ...