Scientists believe that jellyfish are indeed sentient.
Sentience is the ability of an organism to perceive the environment and experience sensations such as pain, suffering, pleasure, and comfort. An organism that is sentient has the ability to receive stimuli from the environment, and then interpret the stimuli as sensations or emotions. The sensations may feel good, bad, or neutral. The organism determines how best to act based on the sensation or emotion, and uses bodily responses or behaviors, in order to avoid negative sensations such as pain and suffering, and achieve positive sensations, such as pleasure or comfort.
Dr. Anders Garm of the University of Copenhagen described the visual system of the box jellyfish, in which an interactive matrix of 24 eyes of four distinct types, two of them very similar to human eyes, allow them to navigate through the mangrove swamps they inhabit. Dr. Richard A. Satterlie of the University of North Carolina at Wilmington revealed that the neurons of jellyfish coalesce into distinctive structures that act as integrating centers, taking in sensory information and translating it into the appropriate response. Dr. David J. Albert of the Roscoe Bay Marine Biological Laboratory in Vancouver, British Columbia, believes that jellyfish have brains. They avoid being swept out to sea by diving down, they avoid fresh water, they like to congregate into schools, and they can detect predators. These are all organized behaviors that are controlled by a central nervous system.
Marc Bekoff, emeritus professor at the University of Colorado, Boulder, one of the pioneering cognitive ethologists in the United States, believes that "Scientists do have ample, detailed, empirical facts to declare that nonhuman animals are sentient beings, and with each study, there are fewer and fewer skeptics."
bigger animals are the jellyfishes enemies.
jellyfishes eat plankton fish and even feed on other jellyfishes
A Sentient Animal was created in 2022.
No yes
35 people die by jellyfishes every year.
sea
Yes, they are.
yes
No. They are invertebrates.
yup
they sting worse than other jellyfishes also they are called box jellyfishes ?
# Pelagiidae, long jellyfishes like the common Pelagia noctiluca# Cyaneidae, the lion's mane jellyfishes# Ulmaridae, flat jellyfishes like the moon jelly# Tiburonidae, some aberrant abyssal forms