They scare, fascinate: jellyfish populate the seas and oceans, and leave neither holidaymakers nor naturalists unmoved. And when we meet a small species in our lakes, ponds, canals, after a moment of surprise, we can only go to discover Craspedacusta sowerby, present in freshwater of all continents.
A small jellyfish in our water bodies
In 1880, London scientists discovered a jellyfish in a pond of exotic plants. Translucent, it is clearly visible to the naked eye with its 2 cm diameter. Named Craspedacusta sowerbyi, or freshwater Craspedote, it belongs to the Cnidaria, a cousin of the jellyfish of the seas and oceans, but also of anemones and corals. It is the only freshwater jellyfish that meets in its class of Hydrozoans only Hydras, polyps always fixed.
Since its first description in London, the Craspedote has been observed on all continents, in 1929 in the Garonne pond and then in all the rivers of France.
Fragile and elegant
The encounter is surprising: bending over the waters of a lake, a canal, an old gravel pit, or even a pond, one sees small translucent, parachute-shaped organisms the size of a 2 euro coin floating. The freshwater Craspedote is a typical Hydrozoan: its umbrella is lined with more or less long tentacles, up to 400, a velum closes the parachute on its lower face. Under the umbel, crossing the velum, a tube, the manubrium, springs out, equipped with an external orifice and connected to 4 radial channels in intern. All the anatomy of the medusa is visible by transparency.
It floats in the middle of its preys
The freshwater Craspedote can move by vigorous contractions of its umbrella, but lets itself float according to the movements of the water, among the zooplankton. It is thus within reach of its preys. Copepods, daphnids, all the small animals of the plankton will be captured by its tentacles, carried to the opening of the manubrium, the mouth, to be swallowed. Once the digestion is finished, the waste will be rejected by the same orifice, serving as anus this time.
In Craspedotes the tentacles are provided with cnidocytes, stinging cells provided with harpoons with paralyzing effects. Only on small preys, the man does not seem to have to worry about its presence, its epidermis cannot be crossed.
It appears and disappears suddenly
The Freshwater Craspedote can go unnoticed one year, as well as proliferate in abundant populations the following year. Then disappear again. Before being a floating jellyfish that can be observed with the naked eye, it takes the form of a tiny polyp of a few millimeters attached to the bottom, to vegetation, to rocks. Its small tentacles allow it to feed on animal micoplankton. This polyp will reproduce by asexual way, by budding, release of crawling "larvae" moving and forming a new polyp, and production of medusoid buds. Some will become medusas leading a sexual reproduction. The fertilized eggs will pass through the planula stage, a small floating ciliated larva that will settle and become a polyp.
Present on all continents and therefore considered as an invasive species, the freshwater Craspedote would not represent a threat to ecosystems. Its feeding in zooplankton remains limited, its presence remains discreet. The impact of climate change on the evolution of the populations of this species may however modify the current data in the coming years.