There’s evidence to suggest that the comb jellyfish was the first animal to appear on Earth some 700 million years ago.
This indicated that the comb jellyfish might be capable of reverting back to a youthful, larval state under certain conditions. The researchers found that extreme stress seemed to trigger this ...
(Though the animals have a striking weirdness and similarity to jellyfish, they are not technically related.) The scientists ...
Researchers were baffled by a bioluminescent mollusk that lives in the deep ocean. They just discovered it's a new species of ...
Turritopsis dohrnii, dubbed the immortal jellyfish, is the best-known of such species ... a larval ctenophore suddenly appeared in the place of an adult ctenophore in a tank in his lab. As it turned ...
It’s not the only weird sea dweller that can manipulate its age, as the similarly goopy ocean blob Turritopsis dohrnii (or ...
The creature is also spectacularly bioluminescent with a vivid neon blue glow, like a cross between a jellyfish and an ...
On the other side, the aquarium would feature marine life attractions that include sharks, penguins, sea turtles, otters and ...
Today, marine creatures that glimmer include some fish, squid, octopuses, jellyfish, even sharks — all the result ... a study co-author and marine biologist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research ...
Image via Getty Images The only thing true about life is getting older and paying taxes. That's unless you're a "time traveler" animal that can age backwards. We're talking about the humble jellyfish.
The Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute used underwater technology for two decades to gather more information on a ...
Starbases are supposed to be a home away from home for starship crews, a sanctuary where they can take a time-out in ...