What is ctenophores also known as?
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Ctenophores, variously known as comb jellies, sea gooseberries, sea walnuts, or Venus's girdles, are voracious predators. Unlike cnidarians, with which they share several superficial similarities, they lack stinging cells. Instead, in order to capture prey, ctenophores possess sticky cells called colloblasts.
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➠ ctenophores :-
- Ctenophores, variously known as comb jellies, sea gooseberries, sea walnuts, or Venus's girdles, are voracious predators.
- Unlike cnidarians, with which they share several superficial similarities, they lack stinging cells.
- Instead, in order to capture prey, ctenophores possess sticky cells called colloblasts.
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➠ MoRe to know..........
- Comb jellies aren't harmful to humans, but they wreak havoc on the local ecosystem.
- The region was plagued by a massive bloom of comb jellies until 1997, when another invasive species of comb jelly, called Beroe ctenophore, was introduced in ballast water, which happens to feed on M. leidyi.
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