[personal profile] eub
What are these things? They wash up on the beach in droves, are from one to half-a-dozen centimeters long, and come up if you google for beach blue diagonal sail.



They are Velella velella, the by-the-wind sailor, a colonial coelenterate like Physalia physalia.

http://www.cornwallwildlifetrust.org.uk/nature/marine/velella.htm
They exist in two forms, either left- or right-handed. The wind tends to distribute them into groups, depending whether they are either left- or right-handed, so strandings tend to be made up of one group.

http://jellieszone.com/velella.htm
Beneath the float is a grouping of several types of zooids, colored brown by the presence of zooxanthellae. A large central mouth is surrounded by shorter reproductive stalks with mouth openings that bud tiny adult medusae that produce eggs and sperm. [...] Dangling beneath the rim of the float are hollow tentacles that ensnare fish and invertebrate eggs, copepods and appendicularians.

Also,
http://www.pbs.org/odyssey/voice/20020407_vfts_transcript.html
Right whales sail by holding up their tails and letting the wind blow them along, but they seem to do this only as a form of play.

Date: 2005-06-03 10:17 am (UTC)
ext_6381: (Default)
From: [identity profile] aquaeri.livejournal.com
Interesting. I saw your pictures and immediately thought of bluebottles, but bluebottles are quite unpleasant (or at least were the one memorable time I got stung by one). On the other hand, I'm not quite convinced that bluebottles are portugese men-of-war, because the bluebottles I've seen only have one long tentacle.

But the flat sail is very elegant. I wonder if they ever get to Australia?

Date: 2005-06-03 11:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marzipan-pig.livejournal.com
> Right whales sail by holding up their tails and letting the wind blow them along, but they seem to do this only as a form of play.

I like this.

Date: 2005-06-03 04:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mh75.livejournal.com
You rule!

Date: 2005-06-05 03:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eub.livejournal.com
Me too.

Date: 2005-06-05 03:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eub.livejournal.com
Bits and pieces on the web seem to be saying that the Pacific species Physalis utriculus has a single tentacle, and is the "bluebottle".

This page mentioned in passing that Velellae come ashore in Australia.

by the way

Date: 2005-06-05 03:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eub.livejournal.com
a) Taxonomists don't say "coelenterate" these days. "Cnidarian".
b) Velella is not so closely related to Physalia as all that. They're in the same class, but different orders.

Date: 2005-06-05 09:20 pm (UTC)
ext_6381: (Default)
From: [identity profile] aquaeri.livejournal.com
Thanks for the research; I'll keep all this in mind. The handy household hint I can return is that if you get stung by a bluebottle, you pour vinegar on.

I'm not sure "getting stung" is the right thing to call it, anyway. In my case, the tail draped against my arm, and broke off the bluebottle, so I had this elegant shallow S-curved thin blue line along my arm that started to hurt like crazy. By the time I got out of the water, the tail itself had dissolved or washed away, and the line was just a row of little blue spots, still stinging away.
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