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moon jelly adult
 
  
  
 A. aurita and other Aurelia species feed on plankton that includes organisms such as mollusks, crustaceans, tunicate larvae, rotifers, young polychaetes, protozoans, diatoms, eggs, fish eggs, and other small organisms. Occasionally, they are also seen feeding on gelatinous zooplankton such as hydromedusae and ctenophores (Rodriguez, 1996). Larvae of A. aurita have nematocysts to capture prey and also to protect themselves from predators. The food is tied with mucus, and then it is passed down by ciliated action down into the gastrovascular cavity where digestive enzymes from serous cell break down the food. There is little known about the requirements for particular vitamins and minerals, but due to the presence of some digestive enzymes, we can deduce in general that A. aurita can process carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids (Arai, 1997). 
  
  
 
modelCanon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XTi
dateSun 2008-02-10 12:39:04
focal59.0mm (35mm equivalent: 95mm)
exposureaperture priority (semi-auto)
distantsame location as last photo
locationMap of "moon jelly adult"
width600 height400
flashNo timing0.077 s (1/13)
aperturef/5.6 iso400
whitebalanceManual latitudeN 49d 18m 2.678s
longitudeW 123d 7m 51.233s continentNorth America
countryCanada regionBritish Columbia
cityVancouver itineraryAquarium
activityBeluga
 
  
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