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Alatina alata Sea wasp, cube jellyfish, Winged box jellyfish

Alatina alatais commonly referred to as Sea wasp, cube jellyfish, Winged box jellyfish. Difficulty in the aquarium: Not suitable for home aquaria!. Toxicity: Toxic.


Profilbild Urheber The University of Chicago Press

Foto: Bonaire, Niederländische Antillen, Karibik

/ September 2016 / Allen Collins / CC BY-SA 4.0
Courtesy of the author The University of Chicago Press

Uploaded by AndiV.

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Profile

lexID:
15605 
AphiaID:
289378 
Scientific:
Alatina alata 
German:
Seerwespe, Würfelqualle, geflügelte Ohrenqualle 
English:
Sea Wasp, Cube Jellyfish, Winged Box Jellyfish 
Category:
Jellyfish  
Family tree:
Animalia (Kingdom) > Cnidaria (Phylum) > Cubozoa (Class) > Carybdeida (Order) > Alatinidae (Family) > Alatina (Genus) > alata (Species) 
Initial determination:
(Reynaud, ), 1830 
Occurrence:
Antigua and Barbuda, Australia, Belize, Bermuda, Bonaire, Brazil, Canada , Circumglobal, Circumtropic, Cuba, East cost of USA, Florida, French Polynesia, Gulf of Mexico, Hawaii, Indonesia, Marschall Islands, New Caledonia, New South Wales (Australia), Northern Mariana Islands, Northern Territory (Australia), Papua New Guinea, Puerto Rico, Queensland (Australia), Samoa, Sri Lanka, The Bahamas, the Caribbean, the Netherlands Antilles, the Seychelles, Venezuela, Virgin Islands, U.S., Western Australia 
Sea depth:
2 - 2282 Meter 
Habitats:
Open ocean 
Size:
up to 9.84" (25 cm) 
Temperature:
4,8 °F - 82.4 °F (4,8°C - 28°C) 
Food:
Amphipods, Copepods, Crustaceans, Daphnia salina, Fish larvae, Invertebrates, Mysis, Predatory, Zooplankton 
Difficulty:
Not suitable for home aquaria! 
Offspring:
Possible to breed 
Toxicity:
Toxic 
CITES:
Not evaluated 
Red List:
Not evaluated (NE) 
Related species at
Catalog of Life:
 
Author:
Publisher:
Meerwasser-Lexikon.de
Created:
Last edit:
2023-03-27 19:20:05 

Captive breeding / propagation

The offspring of Alatina alata are possible. Unfortunately, the number of offspring is not large enough to cover the demand of the trade. If you are interested in Alatina alata, please ask your dealer for offspring. If you already own Alatina alata, try breeding yourself. This will help to improve the availability of offspring in the trade and to conserve natural stocks.

Toxicity


Alatina alata is (very) poisonous and the poison can kill you under circumstances!!!
If you want to keep Alatina alata, inform yourself about the poison and its effects before buying. Keep a note with the telephone number of the poison emergency call and all necessary information about the animal next to your aquarium so that you can be helped quickly in an emergency.
The telephone numbers of the poison emergency call can be found here:
[overview_and_url_DE]
Overview Worldwide: eapcct.org

This message appears for poisonous, very poisonous and also animals whose poison can kill you immediately. Every human reacts differently to poisons. Please therefore weigh the risk for yourself AND your environment very carefully, and never act lightly!

Info

Alatina alata belongs to the cube jellyfish and feeds predatorily on zooplankton, which it captures with the help of its long tentacles and the cnidocytes located there, and kills extremely quickly.
Cube jellyfish kill more people each year than sharks, rays, and sea snakes combined; about 100 people die each year from stings by the jellyfish.

The venom of the box jellyfish is produced by structures in the post-Golgi vesicles of the nematocysts.
When the tentacles come into contact with prey or potential predators, a cocktail of venom is rapidly released from the nematocysts via a long spiny tube, immobilizing the target organism.

Most cube jellyfish live in coastal waters, but Alatina is unusual in that specimens have also been collected in the open ocean at great depths.
Alatina is notable in that populations form monthly aggregations to mate in conjunction with the lunar cycle.

Encounters between humans and this cube jellyfish result in very, very painful and burning injuries for the bather or swimmer as batteries of cnidocytes inject a highly potent cytotoxin into human skin.
While no deaths have yet been reported from this type of cube jellyfish, affected skin areas should be cooled as soon as possible and doused with diluted vinegar.
It is strongly recommended that a physician be consulted for extensive injuries.

Combined molecular and morphological analysis of the venomous ear jellyfish Alatina alata suggests that glandular cells are found in the gastric cirri that may play a dual role in the secretion of toxins and toxin-like enzymes.
These putative glandular cells could be important both internally (prey digestion) and externally (poisoning) in cubozoans.
Despite the absence of nematocysts in the gastric cirrus of mature Alatina alata medusae, this area of the digestive system appears to be the region of the body where toxin-implicating gene products are found in abundance, challenging the notion that in cnidarians toxin is synthesized exclusively in or near nematocysts.

Brief description:
Height to 25 cm, width 1/3 to 1/2 of height. Bell thick, translucent, with smooth surface and four long tentacles, pinkish-yellow banded.
Four T-shaped pits, dull ocher, located more than 1/4 up from bell edge. Gastral cirri in small groups in gastral corners.
Ocelli brownish-black.

Alatina alata is a strong swimmer, occasionally swarming.
Habitat: occasionally coastal. Distribution: pantropical.

Synonyms:
Alatina mordens Gershwin, 2005.
Alatina moseri (Mayer, 1906)
Carybdea alata Reynaud, 1830
Carybdea moseri Mayer, 1906
Tamoya punctata Fewkes, 1883

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