Childrens Illustrated Encyclopedia

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

147


JELLYFISH
The sea wasp jellyfish
uses its tentacles to
sting fish. Tentacles
contain venom that
is painful to humans
and can cause death.

CLOWN FISH
These fish live in
harmony with sea
anemones. The thick,
slimy mucus on their
bodies keeps them
safe from the stinging
cells. Clown fish keep
anemones clean by
feeding on particles
of food among their
waving tentacles.

CORAL SHAPES
The shape of a coral depends on the
arrangement and growing pattern of the
tiny polyps that build it. Corals can be
dazzling in color and extraordinary in
shape, resembling all kinds of objects. This
Carijoa coral looks like a branching tree.

Corals grow in shallow
water around an island.

Coral reef builds
up as island sinks.

Island disappears,
leaving an atoll.

ANEMONE
As a fish stops
struggling, the
anemone’s tentacles
shorten and pull it
into the mouth, through
to the stomach chamber in
the “body” of the anemone.
Any undigested remains
pass out the same way.

HYDRA
The tiny hydra is a freshwater
polyp that lives in ponds. It may
be green, brown, or gray in color.
Hydras feed on other tiny water
creatures that they catch with
their tentacles. Each tentacle
has stinging cells that contain
poison to paralyze the prey.
Hydras reproduce by growing
“buds” on their “stalk.” The
buds break off to form new
hydras. This is a form of
asexual reproduction.

HOW CORAL REEFS ARE FORMED


Corals live in shallow
water around an island
where bright sunlight
makes them grow.
As movements in
Earth’s surface make
the island sink, corals
form a reef. Finally, the
island disappears, leaving
a ring of reefs called an atoll.

Whip Common sea anemone
thrown
out

Stinging tip

Coiled
whip

Stinging cell body

Trigger

STINGING CELLS
Each jellyfish tentacle is armed with deadly weapons. If a fish
touches a tentacle, stinging cells containing tiny coiled-up
threads are triggered into action. They shoot out a hollow
whip like a harpoon, injecting paralyzing poison into the prey.

MAN-OF-WAR
The Portuguese man-of-war is not one jellyfish. It is a floating
colony of hundreds of jellyfish-like creatures known as polyps.
Some polyps form the float, which drifts on the water; others
bear stinging tentacles for paralyzing prey; still others digest
the prey and pass the nutrients through the body.

Clown fish

Anemone slowly engulfs
a trapped fish.

CORALS,

jellyfish Corals, anemones, and

IN THE WARM, TROPICAL SEAS surrounding coral islands
live some of the most fascinating sea creatures.
Despite being so different in appearance, corals,
jellyfish, and anemones belong to the same
family. The fabulous corals that make up coral reefs
are created by little animals called polyps, which look
like miniature sea anemones. Every polyp builds a
cup-shaped skeleton around itself, and as the
polyps grow and die, their skeletons mass together
to create a coral reef. Unlike coral-building
polyps, jellyfish can move around freely,
trailing their long tentacles below
their soft bodies as they swim. Some
jellyfish float on the surface and
are pushed along with the current.
Anemones anchor themselves to
rocks, where they wait for fish
to swim through their tentacles.

Carijoa coral

Find out more
Animals
Deep-sea wildlife
Ocean wildlife

Tentacles trail more
than 50 ft (15 m) from
a man-of-war.


Sea wasp
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