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Creation 33(3):50–51, July 2011

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Jellyfish judgment

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sxc.hu Jelly fish

At schools and universities, students are taught that jellyfish are ‘primitive’ creatures way down the evolutionary ‘tree’. Unlike ‘more advanced’ marine creatures such as fish, jellyfish do not appear to be powerful swimmers. Lacking a backbone, their pumping action is slow and their forward movement often barely perceptible.

But is that a fair assessment?

Two recent studies of what jellyfish1 can do put things in a completely different light.

Unlocking the ‘secrets’ of jellyfish pumps

Medical researchers say jellyfish have just what they’re looking for.2

“Most pumps are made of rigid materials,” says California Institute of Technology researcher Janna Nawroth. “For medical pumps inside the human body, we need flexible pumps because they move fluids in a much gentler way that does not destroy tissues and cells.”

According to Nawroth and her co-researchers, jellyfish undulations “hold secrets” that may make possible vastly improved miniature pumps for medical applications and soft robotics. They have carefully studied the flows and eddies created by the pumping action of jellyfish, particularly a characteristic measure known as the Reynolds Number.3

“We’re very lucky,” said Nawroth. “The Reynolds numbers we see in the movement of jellyfish of different sizes and ages are in the right range as what we need for medical applications.”

There have been other insights too. For example, at a micro scale, jellyfish exploit the narrow layer of water adhering to their surface as they move—i.e., they “use it as [an] additional paddle at no extra cost.” What’s more, there is “a clever arrangement” of multiple pacemakers within the jellyfish body which fine-tune the pumping mechanism.

The researchers plan to use this new-found “practical understanding” of jellyfish movement to help design a range of flexible pumps for medical applications.

How comb jellyfish sneak up on prey

The comb jellyfish Mnemiopsis leidyi consumes vast quantities of copepod plankton (often referred to as zooplankton).

But copepod plankton are renowned for their sensitivity to predator movements in the water, and their rapid escape response. Just how comb jellyfish can catch the predator-wary copepods has presented something of a puzzle, as the University of Gothenburg’s Lars Johan Hansson explains:

“Copepods have a well-developed ability to detect even the slightest water disturbance. They can swim well clear of the source of water deformation in just a split second.”4

So how can the comb jellyfish so successfully make itself “hydrodynamically invisible” to its prey?

Hansson and his co-researchers used advanced video technology to study the water deformation generated by jellyfish movements compared to the water disturbance needed to trigger the copepod’s escape response.5 They found that the comb jellyfish uses microscopic hairlike cilia inside its oral lobes to produce the gentlest of currents, transporting water between the lobes.

“As the water accelerates slowly and is transported undisturbed into the jellyfish together with the prey, there is nothing that alarms the prey until it is next to the capture site inside the lobes, by which time it’s too late to escape,” explained Hansson.4

Making a right judgment about jellyfish

Reporting on the comb jellyfish research, Science Daily wrote:

“Despite its primitive structure, the North American comb jellyfish can sneak up on its prey like a high-tech stealth submarine, making it a successful predator.”4

But to claim something is both “high-tech” and yet ‘primitive’ is surely illogical. The only basis for labelling the jellyfish as ‘primitive’ is the evolutionary story about its origins—one that time and again doesn’t mesh with reality. We’ve seen how medical pump designers recognize the clever arrangement and design in jellyfish pumping mechanisms and that such design is worth copying.

Design does not come about by accident, it needs a Designer—and the Bible tells us who that is.6 It’s the One who will come again (Hebrews 9:28) to judge the living and the dead (1 Peter 4:5). He is also the One who sent a watery judgment upon the whole earth—which is why we find beautifully preserved jellyfish fossils. (Darwin was wrong about that, too—see below.)

Lots of jellyfish beautifully preserved

Image credit: AP Photo / Reed Saxon Fossil jellyfish

Jellyfish fossils would have been a colossal surprise to Charles Darwin, who, in trying to explain the lack of intermediate fossils, wrote in Origin of Species (1859):

“No organism wholly soft can be preserved.”7

Yet jellyfish fossils abound, including these examples in sandstone from Wisconsin, USA, with the surrounding sand ripple marks also beautifully preserved. Evolutionist researcher James Hagadorn (pictured) mused:

“When people find a T-rex, that doesn’t excite me that much, because a T-rex has bones and teeth—really easy to fossilize. But to preserve a jellyfish, that’s hard, because it has no hard parts. Something is there we don’t understand.”8

From an evolutionary perspective, Darwin’s and Hagadorn’s comments are understandable. But jellyfish fossilization speaks not of the slow-and-gradual processes mooted by evolutionary theory, but of rapid burial. And that, coupled with the worldwide distribution of fossils, is consistent with their having been buried in the global Flood of Noah’s day, around 4,500 years ago.9

Posted on homepage: 5 November 2012

References and notes

  1. For the purposes of this article, ‘jellyfish’ is used in the general vernacular sense (rather than the more restrictive taxonomist view which limits ‘true jellyfish’ to certain orders of the phylum Cnidaria and excludes comb jellyfish and Portuguese man-o’war/bluebottle jellyfish). Return to text.
  2. Jellyfish-inspired pumps: researchers investigate next-generation medical and robotic devices, www.sciencedaily.com, 24 November 2010. Return to text.
  3. It doesn’t matter what fluid (liquid or gas) is used for a simulation, as long the Reynold’s Number is constant (providing dynamic similitude). This number is a ratio of inertial to viscous forces named after the British engineer Osborne Reynolds (1842–1912), given by Re = ρvl/µ , where ρ is density, v is mean velocity, l is a characteristic length and µ is viscosity. Return to text.
  4. How voracious comb jellyfish makes itself ‘invisible’ to prey, www.sciencedaily.com, 11 October 2010. Return to text.
  5. Colin, S., Costello, J., Hansson, L., Titelman, J. and Dabiri, J., Stealth predation and the predatory success of the invasive ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi, PNAS 107(40):17223–17227, 2010. Return to text.
  6. Some readers might ask, “But how could a God of Love have created comb jellyfish, designed to kill?” The short answer is that jellyfish were not harmful to humans or fish and other vertebrates before the Fall. For detailed explanation on this, see Catchpoole, D., Skeptics challenge: a ‘God of love’ created a killer jellyfish? Crush, kill, destroy—why do creatures have equipment to attack, kill and eat other animals? Creation 25(4):34–35, 2003; creation.com/killer-jellyfish. Return to text.
  7. Darwin, C., The Origin of Species, first published 1859, quote taken from p. 422 of the 6th edition, 1872 (reprinted 1902). Return to text.
  8. Impressions of Ancient Jellyfish, Geotimes, www.geotimes.org/jan02/WebExtra0130.html, 12 February 2003. Return to text.
  9. For more on this topic see creation.com/jellyfossils and creation.com/epjelly. Return to text.

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