Article 64A98 Discovered in the deep: the sea cucumber that lives a jellyfish life

Discovered in the deep: the sea cucumber that lives a jellyfish life

by
Helen Scales
from Science | The Guardian on (#64A98)

The Pelagothuria natatrix is an extremely rare species of sea cucumber - with a gelatinous body, it spends most of its time swimming

Wafting through the deep sea is a diaphanous creature that resembles a jellyfish, but is in fact something else entirely. Pelagothuria natatrix, meaning swimming sea cucumber, belongs to a group of animals better known for lying around on the seabed like giant, rubbery worms.


This sea cucumber was first named in the late 19th century, but for a long time it was only known from a few battered specimens brought up in scientific trawl nets. They're extremely fragile, almost to the point of being sort of intangible," says Chris Mah, a biologist at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC. The fact that they're gelatinous makes them extremely difficult to study."

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