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  • Jelly fish floats in the water
    FK_f_Sea_181.jpg
  • Israel, Mediterranean Sea, Rhopilema nomadica Jellyfish (a toxic Indo-Pacific variety recently migrated the Mediterranean Sea) on the beach. This jellyfish has caused much anguish to bathers and holiday makers
    SL_Jellyfish_1899.jpg
  • Israel, Mediterranean Sea, Rhopilema nomadica Jellyfish (a toxic Indo-Pacific variety recently migrated the Mediterranean Sea) on the beach. This jellyfish has caused much anguish to bathers and holiday makers
    SL_Jellyfish_1861.jpg
  • Israel, Mediterranean Sea, Rhopilema nomadica Jellyfish (a toxic Indo-Pacific variety recently migrated the Mediterranean Sea) on the beach. This jellyfish has caused much anguish to bathers and holiday makers
    SL_Jellyfish_1874.jpg
  • Israel, Mediterranean Sea, Rhopilema nomadica Jellyfish (a toxic Indo-Pacific variety recently migrated the Mediterranean Sea) on the beach. This jellyfish has caused much anguish to bathers and holiday makers
    SL_Jellyfish_1881.jpg
  • Two excited children near a Rhopilema nomadica Jellyfish (a toxic Indo-Pacific variety recently migrated the Mediterranean Sea) on the beach. This jellyfish has caused much anguish to bathers and holiday makers. Photographed in Haifa, Israel in June
    SL_20150620_175251.jpg
  • Israel, Mediterranean Sea, Rhopilema nomadica Jellyfish (a toxic Indo-Pacific variety recently migrated the Mediterranean Sea) on the beach. This jellyfish has caused much anguish to bathers and holiday makers
    SL_Jellyfish_1864.jpg
  • Two excited children near a Rhopilema nomadica Jellyfish (a toxic Indo-Pacific variety recently migrated the Mediterranean Sea) on the beach. This jellyfish has caused much anguish to bathers and holiday makers. Photographed in Haifa, Israel in June
    SL_20150704_192724.jpg
  • Israel, Mediterranean Sea, Rhopilema nomadica Jellyfish (a toxic Indo-Pacific variety recently migrated the Mediterranean Sea) at 10 meters
    HN_Underwater_5417.jpg
  • Israel, Mediterranean Sea, Rhopilema nomadica Jellyfish (a toxic Indo-Pacific variety recently migrated the Mediterranean Sea) at 10 meters
    HN_Underwater_5421.jpg
  • Israel, Mediterranean Sea, Rhopilema nomadica Jellyfish (a toxic Indo-Pacific variety recently migrated the Mediterranean Sea) at 10 meters
    HN_Underwater_5415.jpg
  • Jellyfish washed onto the beach. Photographed in Haifa, Israel
    SL_20170309_115231.jpg
  • Jellyfish washed onto the beach. Photographed in Haifa, Israel
    SL_20170309_115249.jpg
  • Jellyfish washed onto the beach. Photographed in Haifa, Israel
    SL_20170309_115253.jpg
  • Jellyfish on the beach
    SL_20150620_172556.jpg
  • Under water photography of Ctenophora (commonly known as comb Jelly). Comb jellies (Ctenophores) are jellyfish-like organisms that take their common name from their rows of hair-like cilia. They beat these cilia to propel them through the water. Comb jellies are found in seas throughout the world, reaching a maximum length of around 5 centimetres. They are not true jellyfish as they lack the characteristic stinging cells (cnidocytes). Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    HN_110203_Eilat_7036.jpg
  • Under water photography of Ctenophora (commonly known as comb Jelly). Comb jellies (Ctenophores) are jellyfish-like organisms that take their common name from their rows of hair-like cilia. They beat these cilia to propel them through the water. Comb jellies are found in seas throughout the world, reaching a maximum length of around 5 centimetres. They are not true jellyfish as they lack the characteristic stinging cells (cnidocytes). Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    HN_110203_Eilat_7056.jpg
  • Under water photography of Ctenophora (commonly known as comb Jelly). Comb jellies (Ctenophores) are jellyfish-like organisms that take their common name from their rows of hair-like cilia. They beat these cilia to propel them through the water. Comb jellies are found in seas throughout the world, reaching a maximum length of around 5 centimetres. They are not true jellyfish as they lack the characteristic stinging cells (cnidocytes). Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    HN_110203_Eilat_7050.jpg
  • Jelly fish Illustration from 'Historiae Naturalis De Exanguibus Aquaticis  libri IV' (Natural History of Sea animals book 4) by Johannes Jonston. Published 1665.
    IR_Aquatic_0101.jpg
  • Closeup of Jelly fish swimming in a large aquarium
    AH_f_Aquarium_01669.jpg
  • Closeup of Jelly fish swimming in a large aquarium
    AH_f_Aquarium_01671.jpg
  • Monterey California USA, Jelly fish in the Monterey bay Aquarium
    YA_IMG_4582_fs_PSh.jpg
  • Underwater photography of a coral reef in the Red Sea Aqaba, Jordan
    HN_Aquaba-Diving_73.jpg
  • Underwater photography of a coral reef in the Red Sea Aqaba, Jordan
    HN_Aquaba-Diving_71.jpg
  • Underwater photography of a coral reef in the Red Sea Aqaba, Jordan
    HN_Aquaba-Diving_72.jpg
  • Underwater photography of a coral reef in the Red Sea Aqaba, Jordan
    HN_Aquaba-Diving_70.jpg
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