Showing posts with label Boston Harbor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boston Harbor. Show all posts

4/15/14

Hydromedusae in bloom

Spring is here and the harbor is truly coming alive—boats are returning to their moorings, people are creeping out to bask in the sunshine and the hydromedusae are blooming. This is a hallmark of spring that aquarist Jackie Anderson always looks forward to!

Jackie collects a few hydromedusae from Boston Harbor and uses the pitcher to transport them
back to the holding tanks behind the scenes at the Aquarium.

Jackie is one of the people who takes care of the jellies that you see in the Aquarium. She's also the force behind one of our newest exhibits—the fleeting hydromedusae display near the Edge of the Sea tidepool touch area.

Jackie inspects the tiny hydro medusa recently collected from harbor waters 

Hydromedusae belong to a group of animals that are classified as Cnidarians. Cnidarians include corals, anemones and jellyfish. Hydrozoans begin life as a stationary hydroid (more on that later). Some species remain in this stage, but many others can release free-swimming jellies known as hydromedusae.

In the free-swimming stage, they can look very similar to some of the jellies you see at the Aquarium with the bell shape and tentacles flowing beneath. To get around, these animals pulse just like a sea jelly, too. However, they rarely grow larger than your fingernail and most are nearly translucent.

See they tiny jellyfish-like swimmer in the beaker?

Jackie has been monitoring Boston Harbor for these fascinating gelatinous zooplankton and has been collecting some for display. "I'm fascinated by these animals," she says. "I want to be able to show other people that they are a part of our local ecosystem, you just have to look closely."

This book doesn't come close to identifying all the hydromedusae we encounter

One type of hydromedusa that we often see this time of year is Sarsia. They have the usual bell-shaped umbrella, with four canals and four long tentacles and a mouth-like clapper hanging below. They reach a maximum of only 18 mm high!

Sarsia tubulosa 

We also see what is likely Tiaropsis. These are flatter shaped and look more like miniature moon jellies.

Many hydromedusae look similar, but we believe this is a Tiaropsis

As mentioned above, the free-swimming jellies are just one part of the life cycle of hydromedusae. When they're not pulsing around the surface of the water they are anchored to rocks or pilings at the ocean's floor during the hydroid stage, long filaments studded with polyp. When the polyp is ready, the polyp breaks off into tiny hydromedusae. (Here's a helpful diagram about the life cycle of moon jellies.)

The hydrozoans (a different species from the hydromedusae above) spend much of the year in the hydroid stage,
which are the little nubs along these filaments attached to the glass.

There's still a lot to learn about these tiny seasonal neighbors of Boston Harbor. Come by the Aquarium and see if you can spot these ephemeral jellies in our special exhibit. Or if you're near the shore this time of year, look closely. You might see a glint of tiny tentacle flitting across the surface.

Flat-calm water, a good eye and a trusty scoop is what you need to spot the hydromedusae in the water. 


7/23/11

What's Up, Dock?




A lot of fun outdoor programs start up at the Aquarium during the summer. One is the Dock Program, which aims to connect visitors to the ocean habitat right outside the Aquarium's doors. Boston Harbor is a beautiful and fascinating environment, with lots of animal life living just out of view. But not everyone even knows the Harbor is a harbor and not a river. So, to help our visitors get to know the harbor, we have placed a crab trap and other pieces of equipment into the harbor just off of our dock.

From left: Teen interns Alex Rojas, Kenneil Toney and Adora Thompson set up for the dock program

Throughout the week (especially on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays) we pull these up to see what kind of animal life we find. But we don't just look at the animals; we try to learn something about them as well. Our teen interns (and visitors who want to participate) take observations on the time of day, the weather conditions, the tidal heights and the turbidity of the water (or the water transparency) to learn more about the conditions under which our animals live. This also serves as an introduction to basic marine science.

In the photos below, you can see our teen interns setting up for the Dock Program and gathering data, and you can see a couple of the animals they found during that day's program.

Teen intern Adora Thompson takes a secchi disk measurement. By lowering the secchi disk into the water and measuring the depth at which the white part of the disk is no longer visible, you can learn some basic information about the turbidity (cloudiness) of the water. 

A female lobster and a female spider crab are caught during the day's dock program.