Box Jellyfish Have “Quite Sophisticated” Eyes, “Not So Different From Our Own”
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Oliver Sacks at the New York Review of Books writes on the mental life of “plants and worms, among others,” and it is a wonderful science essay that completely buries the jellyfish lede:
In the 1880s, however, despite Agassiz’s and Romanes’s work [defining the role of synapses as they relate to organism function], there was still a general feeling that jellyfish were little more than passively floating masses of tentacles ready to sting and ingest whatever came their way, little more than a sort of floating marine sundew.
But jellyfish are hardly passive. They pulsate rhythmically, contracting every part of their bell simultaneously, and this requires a central pacemaker system that sets off each pulse. Jellyfish can change direction and depth, and many have a “fishing” behavior that involves turning upside down for a minute, spreading their tentacles like a net, and then righting themselves… If bitten by a fish, or otherwise threatened, jellyfish have an escape strategy — a series of rapid, powerful pulsations of the bell — that shoots them out of harm’s way; special, oversized (and therefore rapidly responding) neurons are activated at such times.
Of special interest and infamous reputation among divers is the box jellyfish (Cubomedusae) — one of the most primitive animals to have fully developed image-forming eyes, not so different from our own.
Box jellyfish have “retinas, corneas, and lenses.” Box jellyfish: they’re just like us. Box jellyfish: *faints* [NYRB]