Wild Moon Jellies
Yes, visitors to the Boston waterfront need only look down into the Harbor to see marine wildlife. When we recently visted, not only did we see many moon jellies, but also a three foot long fish of some kind (dunno what kind). I don't have a picture of the fish (which made the mallards up on the Harbor surface quite nervous) but I do have these shots of our urban jellies.


The harbor has been cleaned up quite a bit in recent years (in the late 80's, no less an authority on filth than John Lydon [formerly Johnny Rotten] called it "an open sewer"), but not as much as those pictures seem to indicate. I cleaned up the harbor in photoshop so that you could see the animal better. Here's the un-retouched version of the first picture:

cross-posted to
invertebrates, why not?


The harbor has been cleaned up quite a bit in recent years (in the late 80's, no less an authority on filth than John Lydon [formerly Johnny Rotten] called it "an open sewer"), but not as much as those pictures seem to indicate. I cleaned up the harbor in photoshop so that you could see the animal better. Here's the un-retouched version of the first picture:

cross-posted to
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-community.gif)
no subject
I tried to find you a website of our annual "by the wind sailor" jellyfish that blanket Samoa and other beaches around here. They're goregous creatures. I don't belive these are local photos, but they share the idea
http://www.glaucus.org.uk/By-the-wind-sailor-2_ST.jpg
and
http://www.somersetbirder.fsnet.co.uk/by-the-wind-sailors2.jpg
http://www.cornwallwildlifetrust.org.uk/images/digital/velellastranding.jpg
no subject
no subject
no subject
Check my last post. I'm trying to name my newest frogs.
no subject
Giant fish and other oddities
(Anonymous) 2005-07-11 04:58 pm (UTC)(link)Re: Giant fish and other oddities
Not sure about the fish. I thought that tarpon was a tropical beast that Hemingway wannabees fought on rented boats. Fish are my biggest blind spot when it comes to New England fauna.
I was vaguely aware of there being freshwater jellies, but I've definitely never seen them! Now at least I've seen a picture: http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/artnov99/fwjelly.html
My email address is pretty public hereabouts. Check out my profile, or just email me at jefctaylor@hotmail.com
p.s. I'm still a little guy, but I'm not skinny anymore.
For evidence, scan through my wife's journal: