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Giant 'phantom jellyfish' that eats with mouth-arms spotted off California coast

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The phantom jellyfish (Stygiomedusa gigantea) is one of the ocean's most elusive animals. (Image credit: © 2021 MBARI)

Scientists piloting a remote submarine have filmed mesmerizing footage of a giant phantom predator lurking in the deep waters of Monterey Bay, California.

The giant phantom jellyfish (Stygiomedusa gigantea) was captured as it was serenely floating — its long, velvety "mouth-arms" trailing around it — at a depth of 3,200 feet (975 meters) by marine biologists from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI). This is one of only nine times that MBARI scientists have spotted the elusive creature across the institute’s many thousands of submarine dives.

"The giant phantom jelly was first collected in 1899. Since then, scientists have only encountered this animal about 100 times," MBARI said in a statement. 

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The giant phantom, which is among the largest jellyfish on the planet, has been spotted in the deepest parts of all the world’s oceans except for the Arctic. Even so, MBARI says that sightings of the creature are still rare, as it usually lives too far down for humans or remote submarines to access.

The sunhat shaped-bell of the deep-sea dweller is more than 3.3 feet (1 meter) wide, and it's ribbon-like mouth-arms can grow to more than 33 feet (10 m) in length, MBARI said.

The mouth-arms of the phantom jellyfish trail behind it like scarves in the wind. (Image credit: © 2021 MBARI.)

Not much is known about phantom jellyfish, but scientists think it uses its mouth-arms, which stream like loose scarves in its wake, to ensnare unfortunate prey and winch them up to its mouth. The creature propels itself through the pitch-black depths of the ocean with periodic pulses from its faintly-glowing orange head.

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