Jellyfish are usually poisonous fish that come in all different shapes, colours and sizes. They are usually transparent which means you can see through them and they can hurt you if they sting you. They are called jelly fish because their bodies are wobbly like jelly! Some jellies live in the bottom of the sea and can lighten up in bright colours. Some are as big as 40 metres long, almost 120 feet, as long as a train, with lots of stinging cells in their tails. Jelly fish have no spine or bones. http://kids.nationalgeographic.com/kids/animals/creaturefeature/jellyfish/
Czhine
Jelly have tentatcles.
They can be up to 100 feet long
The tentacles have poison if you touch them they can sting
YOu can touch the top of the jelly fish
By: stufffromthelab on July 14, 2010
at 10:49 AM
Kayshanna
Jelly fish are now being tagged so that scientists can see how they live and where they go.
They have no bones and no brains.
They have no eyes
They don’t carry food for a long time they digest it quickly.
By: stufffromthelab on July 14, 2010
at 10:51 AM
Jose
Jelly fish you have to be careful not to touch their tentacles. They don’t bite you on purpose, it is an accident. They have put a tracking device on the most poisonous kind of Jelly fish the Australian box Jelly fish. He can kill you in a minute
By: stufffromthelab on July 14, 2010
at 10:53 AM
Malik
Jelly fish are 95 % water. They are like Jelly. They have long tentacles that are like long ribbons they are poisonous. They don’t mean to do it. The longest tentacles are 120 feet.
By: stufffromthelab on July 14, 2010
at 10:56 AM
Raeshon
Jelly fish have no eyes, no brain and no backbone. Which make them an invertabrate. Their mouth under their bell shaped bodies. They have tentacles that sting they contain. They use these tentacles to save their own life.
By: stufffromthelab on July 14, 2010
at 11:01 AM
Erik
Jelly fish use tentacles to protect themselves in self defense. They are not vertabrates. They eat and digest. The take in food and gets rid of waste.
By: stufffromthelab on July 14, 2010
at 11:02 AM