Readers’ wildlife photos

March 13, 2026 • 8:15 am

Abby Thompson, a UC Davis mathematician, is back with more photos (and a video!) from the intertidal of northern California. Abby’s captions and IDs are indented, and you can enlarge her photos by clicking on them.

Jellyfish!

I thought I’d throw some jellyfish into the lull between the great winter tides and the great summer ones.

The reproductive cycles of the tidepool creatures are wildly varied, with behaviors ranging from maternal (see Epiactis prolifera from my last post), chancy (see mussels), through incessant (see nudibranchs).   But for sheer baroque complication, I vote for the jellyfish.    Many who stroll on a beach will see the quivering gelatinous masses of jellyfish stranded by the tide, and the less fortunate will have encountered their stinging tentacles while in the water.  This describes, a little, how they get there.

There are several jellyfish species common on the Northern California beaches; here are some of them:

Aurelia labiata (Greater Moon Jelly):

Chrysaora fuscescens (Pacific sea nettle):

Chrysaora colorata (purple-striped sea nettle) These are big, about a foot across:

Another Chrysaora colorata (handsome creatures):

Genus Aequorea (crystal jelly):

Polyorchis haplus:

Scrippsia pacifica (giant bell jelly):

The Chrysaoras and Aurelia labiata are in the class Scyphozoa; the rest are in the class Hydrozoa.

For all of these, males and females get together in the same vicinity, and release eggs and sperm (see “chancy” above), which form little “planulae”.    Then things get complicated.     Because (usually) the planulae settle down and attach themselves to something, and become polyps.  Like these tiny things:

Genus Sarsia:

Hydrocoryne bodegensis:

But how do they get from here (e.g. something like Sarsia) to there (e.g. something like Polyorchis haplus)?   Well they don’t, always, and sometimes they don’t get from there to here, either, but here’s an illustration of the process when it goes through a “typical” complete cycle:

And in fact if you look closely at that photo of H. bodegensis, you can see a little medusa just budding off, circled in the photo below:

Here’s a video of a set of newly-formed “baby jellyfish” (they look excited) which swam into my microscope view.    I didn’t know what I was seeing, so don’t have a photo of the polyp from which they likely emerged.   This means I have no idea of the genus (or even the class- if these are Scyphozoa then these are really ephyrae which will turn into medusae).

There seem to be many species for which the complete reproductive  process is not documented –  for example, if you search for the polyp stage of Polyorchis haplus, the answer is that we don’t know what it is, nor where it can be found.

 

A final oddity of this elaborate reproductive process is the existence of the so-called “immortal” jellyfish. (not found in the cold waters of Northern California).  If damaged at the medusa phase, this one can revert to its earlier (genetically identical) polyp phase- and so on ad infinitum, apparently.  As though, when things go wrong in your life, you could go back to your childhood and try again.

I’m grateful for help with IDs from experts on inaturalist and elsewhere.    All mistakes are mine.

7 thoughts on “Readers’ wildlife photos

  1. If I remember correctly from my invertebrate zoology and paleontology courses, regarding the Cnidaria: it’s complicated.

    Nice to see jellyfish get their day in the sun (even if it’s better for them not to be in the sun)!

    1. Indeed. I knew about the polyps and that “budding off” but the “immortal jellyfish” was completely new to me.

  2. These are amazing photos Abby and thanks for the lesson. I grew up fishing the James River (tidal estuary) just a few miles from the Atlantic Ocean with my father and seeing lots of jellyfish of approx six-inch diameter. The one day we went to fish the Chesapeake Bay, directly open to the ocean, and in a sheltered and shallow sandy inlet I saw hundreds of jellyfish of several varieties but mostly a foot or more in diameter. Seeing those huge jellyfish for the first time has stayed with me for some seventy years now. Thanks for tweaking those memories this morning, professor.

  3. My favourite Coelenterate was Hydra. This tiny, green, freshwater species I once presented to my Biology classes at secondary school, NZ. To catch them is easy; place some water weed in fish tank of water, and float there-on a white ice cream container. After a day or two, and given some light shining on the container, Hydra should attach to the bottom of the container, easily removed by a paint brush and transferred to a watch glass. Add some water fleas (Daphnia) and under a good binocular watch the feeding. Something for children and grandchildren to try.
    Your photos are terrific, Abby; thank you.

Leave a Reply to Lou Jost Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *