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  1. The lion's mane jellyfish (Cyanea capillata), also known as the giant jellyfish, arctic red jellyfish, or the hair jelly, is one of the largest known species of jellyfish. Its range is confined to cold, boreal waters of the Arctic, northern Atlantic, and northern Pacific Oceans.

  2. Lion ’s mane jellyfish, commonly called the hair jelly or giant jellyfish, is a species of marine jellyfish that inhabit the cold, subarctic waters of the oceans in the Northern Hemisphere.

  3. The Lion's Mane Jellyfish can grow to be one of the largest of all jellyfishes. Identification. The Lion's Mane Jellyfish's disc-shaped bell can be over 1 m across and its trailing tentacles can reach more than 10 m in length. These tentacles are very fine and difficult to see. Habitat. The Lion's Mane Jellyfish lives in coastal waters and oceans.

  4. It’s a colossal tentacled monster that drags with it a thick coat of venomous limbs that give the animal its name. The lion’s mane jellyfish inhabits cold waters in the Arctic, Atlantic and Pacific oceans and is also known as the giant jellyfish, or arctic red jellyfish.

  5. The Lion’s mane Jellyfish is by far the largest jellyfish in the ocean, reaching lengths of up to 120 ft with a bell of up to 8ft wide, inhabiting the colder waters of the ocean. Let’s take a look at Lion’s mane jellyfish, how to identify it, where it can be found, and all about its common habits.

  6. The Lion's Mane Jellyfish is found in the cooler regions of the Atlantic, Pacific, North Sea, and Baltic Sea. They are especially common along the East coast of Britain. They are found in the pelagic zone as medusae and then benthic zone as polyps.

  7. The lion’s mane jelly is the largest sea jelly among the over 200 species that make up the class of the true jellies, Scyphozoa. The genus name, Cyanea, is derived from the Greek ‘kyanos” which means dark blue. The first species described in the genus was dark blue.

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