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Praya dubia - Wikipedia
Praya dubia, the giant siphonophore, lives in the mesopelagic zone to bathypelagic zone at 700 m (2,300 ft) to 1,000 m (3,300 ft) below sea level. It has been found off the coasts around the world, from Iceland in the North Atlantic to Chile in the South Pacific.
Giant Siphonophore Animal Facts - Praya dubia - A-Z Animals
2024年5月27日 · The giant siphonophore is classified as Praya dubia. It belongs to the family Prayidae and order Siphonophorae. The name siphonophore comes from the Greek words siphon which translates to “tube” and pherein which means “to bear.”
Praya dubia (Cnidarians of the Eastern Pacific - iNaturalist
Praya dubia, or the giant siphonophore, is a deep sea siphonophore (living at 700 m to 1000 m below sea level), a member of the Hydrozoa. With a body length of 40 m (130 ft), Praya dubia is the second-longest sea organism, after the bootlace worm.
Praya dubia - Facts, Diet, Habitat & Pictures on Animalia.bio
Praya dubia, the giant siphonophore, lives in the deep sea at 700 m (2,300 ft) to 1,000 m (3,300 ft) below sea level. It has been found off the coasts around the world, from Iceland in the North Atlantic to Chile in the South Pacific.
Praya dubia (Quoy & Gaimard 1833) - Encyclopedia of Life
Praya dubia is a member of the order Siphonophorae within the class Hydrozoa. With a body length of up to 50 m (160 ft), it is the second-longest sea organism after the bootlace worm. Its length also rivals the blue whale, the sea's largest mammal, although Praya …
Longest bioluminescent animal | Guinness World Records
The world's longest bioluminescent animal is the giant siphonophore or swimming bell (Praya dubia), an extremely elongate, almost transparent species of marine invertebrate related to the more familiar, jellyfish-resembling Portuguese man o' war.
What is a Praya dubia and how long is it? - Discover Wildlife
It’s not a fish, a whale or a jellyfish – the giant siphonophore (Praya dubia) is the unlikely giant of the underwater world. How long is a Praya dubia? The giant siphonophore grows to more than …
Giant Siphonophore (Praya dubia) - iNaturalist
Praya dubia, or the giant siphonophore, is a deep sea siphonophore (living at 700 m to 1000 m below sea level), a member of the Hydrozoa. With a body length of 40 m (130 ft), Praya dubia is the second-longest sea organism, after the bootlace worm.
Prayid siphonophores - UC Santa Barbara
The siphonophore Praya dubia is said to be one of the longest animals on earth and can stretch for more than 40 meters. This picture shows just one of the two nectophores (swimming bells) and a little fragment of the long chain which it pulls through the water.
The Deep Next Door | Ecology Center
Longer even than the blue whale, individual specimens have been found measuring over 130 feet in length. This is the siphonophore Praya dubia, and it makes its home in the cold, black waters of the Monterey Submarine Canyon in California’s Monterey Bay.