杏吧原创

Avast! It’s a gas-filled blob with a sting in the tail

Besides its wondrously alien look, the coolest thing about the Portuguese man-of-war is that it is not an individual animal at all, but an entire community
Avast! It's a gas-filled blob with a sting in the tail

(Image: Peter Parks/)

APART from its wondrously alien look, the coolest thing about the Portuguese man-of-war is that it is not an individual animal at all. Nor is it a jellyfish.

It is a siphonophore 鈥 an entity formed of a colony of tiny animals called zooids. These creatures are so closely integrated with one another that they can鈥檛 survive on their own. The zooids form at least three specialised types of polyp. There are polyps dedicated to digestion and to reproduction. Then there鈥檚 the dangerous type 鈥 the tentacles that can trail up to 50 metres below the surface, making it one of the longest 鈥渁nimals鈥 on Earth. These tendrils carry venom that can kill small animals, like the unlucky fish in the photo. Although desperately painful for humans, the sting doesn鈥檛 usually kill us.

Above the water, the most visible part of the siphonophore is the gas-filled bladder, said to resemble an 18th-century Portuguese warship (to me, the shot below looks more like Godzilla emerging from the ocean). The bladder contains carbon monoxide, generated from a gas gland. It can be deflated in the event of a turtle attack, allowing the colony to sink out of harm鈥檚 way.

Marine-life photographer , based in Pacific Grove, California, took this shot in Bermuda. While the man-of-war favours tropical and subtropical waters, unusual currents can bring it to temperate shores.

Avast! It's a gas-filled blob with a sting in the tail

(Image: Wild Wonders of Europe/Lundgren/naturepl.com)

Topics: Biology / Oceans