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Cubozoa

. The medusa phase dominates in animals in the Cubozoan class. Cubozoan medusae are commonly called box jellies because they have a cube shape with a single tentacle or group of tentacles hanging from each corner at the mouth end of the animal. The Cubozoan polyp is small and inconspicuous and an entire polyp transforms into a medusa in a type of asexual reproduction. Cubozoa consists of about 20 species of sea wasps and their relatives. The nematocyst sting of some cubozoans, including the Australian sea wasp Chironex fleckeri, contains poison that can be fatal to humans.

Types of Cnidarians

Scientists divide cnidarians into four classes: Hydrozoa, Scyphozoa, Cubozoa, and Anthozoa. They base this division partly on whether the polyp or medusa is more conspicuous during an animal’s life cycle. Hydrozoa In Hydrozoa, the polyp phase dominates in the animal’s life cycle. Most hydrozoan polyps reproduce by budding to form a polyp colony that fastens to solid objects such as rocks and pilings. Some hydrozoan polyps also bud to form a medusa, which is generally small and lives only a short time. This class comprises about 3,100 species, including the freshwater hydra (which lacks a medusa stage), the Portuguese man-of-war, and fire coral. Scyphozoa The medusa phase dominates in most of the 200 species of scyphozoans, the cnidarians most frequently referred to as jellyfish. Scyphozoan medusae are larger and have a more complicated structure than the short-lived medusae of the hydrozoans. Scyphozoan medusae live several months or more, reproducing sexually to form small, inconspicu