tentaculate comb jellies - significado y definición. Qué es tentaculate comb jellies
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Qué (quién) es tentaculate comb jellies - definición

PHYLUM OF RADIATA
Comb jelly; Comb jellies; Comb Jellies; Ctenophora (phylum); Ctenophore; Jelly balls; Jelly ball; Ctenophores; Comb Jelly; Phylum Ctenophora; Ctenophorans
  • ''Aulacoctena'' sp., a cydippid ctenophore
  • Comb jelly, [[Shedd Aquarium]], Chicago
  • ''Nepheloctena'' spp, formerly known as "Tortugas red", with trailing tentacles and clearly visible sidebranches, or tentilla
  • ''Beroe'' sp. swimming with open mouth, at left. This animal is 3–6 cm long.
  • Anatomy of Cydippid Ctenophore
  • Cydippid larva of ''Bolinopsis'' sp., a few millimetres long
  • diffracting]] along the comb rows of a ''[[Mertensia ovum]]'', left tentacle deployed, right tentacle retracted
  •  [[Lobata]] sp., with paired thick lobes
  • ''Beroe ovata'' at the surface on the Black Sea coast
  • doi-access=free }}</ref>}}
  • Spotted comb jelly

Comb over         
  • [[Carl Levin]], American attorney
  • Patent by Donald and Frank Smith, 1977
TYPE OF HAIRSTYLE COMMONLY WORN BY BALD MEN TO COVER THE BALDNESS
Combover; Comb-over; Comb-overs; Yinkel; The Comb-Over
A comb over or combover is a hairstyle commonly worn by balding men in which the hair is grown long and combed over the bald area to minimize the appearance of baldness. Sometimes the parting is lowered so that more hair can be used to cover the balding area.
Comb Ceramic         
  • Comb ceramic pottery from Taipalsaari, Finland
TYPE OF ANCIENT POTTERY
Jeulmun pottery; Pit-Comb Ware; Jeulmun vessel; Pit–Comb Ware; Pit–Comb Ceramic; Pit-Comb Ceramic; Comb-pattern pottery
Comb Ceramic or Pit-Comb Ware (in Europe), Jeulmun pottery or Jeulmun vessel (in Korea) is a type of pottery subjected to geometric patterns from a comb-like tool. This type of pottery was widely distributed in the Baltic, Finland, the Volga upstream flow, south Siberia, Lake Baikal, Mongolian Plateau, the Liaodong Peninsula and the Korean Peninsula.
Comb and paper         
PRIMITIVE MUSICAL INSTRUMENT
Comb and tissue paper; Paper-comb; Comb-and-paper; Blue-blowing; Tissue paper-and-comb; Paper and comb; Comb-music
Comb and paper is a rudimentary musical instrument which consists of a comb with a piece of paper pressed to it. To play it, one has to press their lips to the paper pressed to the comb and sing or vocalize into it.

Wikipedia

Ctenophora

Ctenophora (; SG ctenophore ; from Ancient Greek κτείς (kteis) 'comb', and φέρω (pherō) 'to carry') comprise a phylum of marine invertebrates, commonly known as comb jellies, that inhabit sea waters worldwide. They are notable for the groups of cilia they use for swimming (commonly referred to as "combs"), and they are the largest animals to swim with the help of cilia.

Depending on the species, adult ctenophores range from a few millimeters to 1.5 m (5 ft) in size. Only 100 to 150 species have been validated, and possibly another 25 have not been fully described and named. The textbook examples are cydippids with egg-shaped bodies and a pair of retractable tentacles fringed with tentilla ("little tentacles") that are covered with colloblasts, sticky cells that capture prey.

Their bodies consist of a mass of jelly, with a layer two cells thick on the outside, and another lining the internal cavity. The phylum has a wide range of body forms, including the egg-shaped cydippids with retractable tentacles that capture prey, the flat generally combless platyctenids, and the large-mouthed beroids, which prey on other ctenophores.

Almost all ctenophores function as predators, taking prey ranging from microscopic larvae and rotifers to the adults of small crustaceans; the exceptions are juveniles of two species, which live as parasites on the salps on which adults of their species feed.

Despite their soft, gelatinous bodies, fossils thought to represent ctenophores appear in lagerstätten dating as far back as the early Cambrian, about 525 million years ago. The position of the ctenophores in the "tree of life" has long been debated in molecular phylogenetics studies. Biologists proposed that ctenophores constitute the second-earliest branching animal lineage, with sponges being the sister-group to all other multicellular animals (Porifera Sister Hypothesis). Other biologists contend that ctenophores were emerging earlier than sponges (Ctenophora Sister Hypothesis), which themselves appeared before the split between cnidarians and bilaterians. Pisani et al. reanalyzed of the data and suggest that the computer algorithms used for analysis were misled by the presence of specific ctenophore genes that were markedly different from those of other species. Follow up analysis by Whelan et al. (2017) yielded further support for the Ctenophora Sister hypothesis, and the issue remains a matter of taxonomic dispute.