Olive core beauty light ctenophore jellyfish, give me an intuitive impression such as seeing space creatures. These jellyfish emit beautiful sparkles in the water, so let's call them by this name. In fact, this is also helpless, I really don't know its specific official name, or does it really have an official name?

Taken on February 3, 2020 in the Ambon Islands, Indonesia
Strictly speaking, in fact, ctenophores are not jellyfish, not the species below jellyfish, but jellyfish uncles. Jellyfish's father is the phylum of spiny cells, while ctenophore is ctenophore phylum, independent of the phylum, and jellyfish's father is a brother, then it is jellyfish uncle.
Ctenophores should be non-toxic, which scholars say has no spiny cell, so they are not jellyfish of spiny cell animals, and they are independent biological family gates.
Ctenophores, also known as sea walnuts, sea gooseberries, cat's eyes.... And this olive core micron jellyfish is only one of the large family of ctenophores jellyfish, and it is only one of the members of this type of jellyfish that will emit light.
There is no specific species of ctenophore on the network, and there are about 150 species in this large family worldwide, and it is estimated that 40-50 species have not yet been named. They float and move through the movement of cilia and belong to the more magical marine creatures.
Olive nucleus is a nucleus, shaped like a olive nucleus, the body glows, they are not stinging animals, it does not have stinging cells, it does not sting.
Personally, I think this eucalyptus is still relatively rare, at least the first time I saw this jellyfish group, there was a dreamy feeling of being in space at that moment.
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