Miami Beach Sighting

Hello Ron,

Hope all is good with you. Today I found a strange thing swimming in the ocean,, I never saw something like this before and figured I would send it to you so your experts can maybe give me some insight on what it could be. It looks like something out of a Sci-Fi movie after removing it out of the ocean today and placed it on a towel to take the photos it still had a “Heart Beat” like it was breathing .. it looked like if you were laying on your back and breathing watching your stomach expand and contract while you breath? Very weird .. I didnt touch it since I had no clue if it was poisonous or not..it had small tentacles all around it and used that to swim in the water…

Jeff

1 Comment »

  stingmate wrote @

Cassiopea is a genus of scyphozoan jellyfish very commonly found in shallow mangrove swamps, mudflats, and turtle grass flats in Florida and various other similar environments around the world, where it lives usually upside-down on the bottom. Where found, there may be numerous individuals with varying shades of white, blue, green and brown. They have a mild sting since they are primarily photosynthetic, but sensitive individuals may have a stronger reaction. The stinging cells are excreted in a mucus; swimming over these jellies (especially using swim fins) may cause transparent, essentially invisible, sheets of this mucus to be lifted up into the water column, where they are then encountered by unsuspecting swimmers. The stings, appearing in the form of a red rash-like skin irritation, are notorious for being extraordinarily itchy.
The Cassiopeia jellyfish (one common species is Cassiopeia andromeda) belongs to the Order Rhizostomeae and mostly lives in sandy areas and seagrass beds. The Cassiopea jellyfish is also called “Upside Down Jellyfish”, because it lies on its back, so that the bell touches the ground. In this position it resembles a sea anemone. Sometimes this jellyfish is picked up by a crab (Dorippe frascone) and carried on its back. The crab uses the jellyfish to defend itself against possible predators.

Chad


Your comment

HTML-Tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <pre> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>