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Aurelia aurita (Common jellyfish) Pairi Daiza aquarium, Belgium
Genus species:
   Aurelia aurita
Common name:
   Common jellyfish
Genus:
   Aurelia
Family:
   Ulmaridae
Suborder:
   -n/a-
Aurelia aurita (Common jellyfish) Pairi Daiza aquarium, Belgium
Genus species:
   Aurelia aurita
Common name:
   Common jellyfish
Genus:
   Aurelia
Family:
   Ulmaridae
Suborder:
   -n/a-
Aurelia aurita (Common jellyfish) Pairi Daiza aquarium, Belgium
Genus species:
   Aurelia aurita
Common name:
   Common jellyfish
Genus:
   Aurelia
Family:
   Ulmaridae
Suborder:
   -n/a-

Genus (Animalia): Aurelia

Aurelia is a genus of scyphozoan jellyfish, commonly called moon jellies. There are at least 13 species in the genus Aurelia including many that are still not formally described. It has been suggested that Aurelia is the best-studied group of gelatinous zooplankton, with Aurelia aurita the best-studied species in the genus; two other species, Aurelia labiata and Aurelia limbata have also been investigated (studies summarized by Arai). Since most previous studies of Aurelia were done without the benefit of genetic identification, one cannot positively attribute the results of most research to the species named. Species of Aurelia can be found in the Atlantic Ocean, the Arctic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean, and are common to the waters off California, northern China, Japan, Korea, Australia, New Zealand, the Black Sea, Indonesia, the eastern coast of the United States as well as Europe. Aurelia undergoes alternation of generations, whereby the sexually-reproducing pelagic medusa stage is either male or female, and the benthic polyp stage reproduces asexually. Meanwhile, life cycle reversal, in which polyps are formed directly from juvenile and sexually mature medusae or their fragments, was also observed in Aurelia sp.1. The genus was first described in 1845 by Jean-Baptiste Lamarck in his book Histoire Naturelle des Animaux sans Vertebres (Natural History of Invertebrates).


Reference: Wikipedia

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