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Though box jellies are known to inhabit the Indo-Pacific region, there is very little collected data or studies proving this. It was only in 2014, that the first ever box jelly sightings (Tripedalia cystophora) were officially published in Australia, Thailand and the Indian Ocean. [24]
Chirodectes illustration of Chirodectes maculatus Scientific classification Domain: Eukaryota Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Cnidaria Class: Cubozoa Order: Chirodropida Family: Chirodropidae Genus: Chirodectes Gershwin, 2006 Type species Chirodectes maculatus (Cornelius, Fenner & Hore, 2005) Chirodectes is a very rare, monospecific genus of box jellyfish in the family Chirodropidae. The first and ...
Box jellyfish swim by expanding and contracting their bells vigorously. [6] During the day Tripedalia cystophora is mostly to be found within 20 cm (8 in) of the surface, in sunlit positions among the prop roots of mangroves. These warm sunlit areas are where its main food item, the copepod Dioithona oculata, are to be found during the day. [5]
Chironex fleckeri, commonly known as the Australian box jelly, and nicknamed the sea wasp, is a species of extremely venomous box jellyfish found in coastal waters from northern Australia and New Guinea to Indonesia, Cambodia, Malaysia and Singapore, the Philippines and Vietnam. [1]
Like other box jellyfish, Tamoya ohboya is highly venomous. [2] Since 1989, [2] three people have reported being stung by Tamoya ohboya, which led to intense pain, skin damage and, in one of the cases, hospitalization. [1] Its bell is shaped like a plastic bag. [4] The number of people stung by Tamoya ohboya is likely higher than the three ...
Alatina alata is a transparent box jellyfish with an pyramidal with rounded tip umbrella, smooth exumbrella and thin and transparent mesoglea. The manubrium is short, square, with four simple lips, and without mesenteries joining manubrium walls to subumbrellar stomach walls.
A few sightings of the species have also been reported in the Philippines and Australia. The species closely resembles other species of box jelly, and its habitats have been found to coexist with other Chirodropidae , such as Chironex yamaguchii and Chironex fleckeri ; it is quite possible that sightings in Australia and the Philippines have ...
Tamoya haplonema is a species of box jellyfish in the genus Tamoya. It is the type species of the genus and was described in 1859. It is the type species of the genus and was described in 1859. The medusa possesses four tentacles, one each on an inter-radial pedal.