Biology:Tamoya ohboya

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Short description: Species of jellyfish

Tamoya ohboya
Tamoya-ohboya-Smithsonian-DeLoach.jpg
Scientific classification edit
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Cnidaria
Class: Cubozoa
Order: Carybdeida
Family: Tamoyidae
Genus: Tamoya
Species:
T. ohboya
Binomial name
Tamoya ohboya
Collins et al., 2011

Tamoya ohboya, also known as the Bonaire banded box jellyfish, is a species of box jellyfish formally described in 2011. Tamoya ohboya was discovered by a biologist and educator, William Gillan. In order to name the newly discovered species, Coalition on the Public Understanding of Science organized an online competition, which was won by the high school marine biology teacher Lisa Peck,[1][2] who explained her winning entry saying: "I bet ‘Oh Boy’ is the first thing said when a biologist or layman encounters the Bonaire Banded Box Jellyfish."[3] It is the first species of the genus Tamoya to be discovered in over 100 years.[1] The International Institute for Species Exploration included it in a list of Top Ten New Species in 2011.[2]

The species was discovered in the waters of the Dutch Caribbean islands (then part of the Netherlands Antilles).[1] There have been roughly 70 confirmed sightings since 1989,[2] approximately 45 of which took place in the waters of Bonaire and the rest off the shores of Mexico, St Lucia, Curacao, Barbados, Honduras and St Vincent.[1] The most closely related species of Tamoya ohboya live in the waters of Brazil and the south-eastern United States of America. It is characterized by a deep stomach, densely spread cnidocysts and banded tentacles whose color ranges from reddish-orange to dark brown. Tamoya ohboya is hard to collect due to its fast swimming and ungregarious nature.[1] Its ecology is still relatively unknown, but it is presumed that it is a daylight predator[1] whose prey includes small crustaceans and fish.[2]

Like other box jellyfish, Tamoya ohboya is highly venomous.[2] Since 1989,[2] three people have reported being stung by Tamoya ohboya, which led to intense pain, skin damage and, in one of the cases, hospitalization.[1] Its head is shaped like a plastic bag.[4]

The number of people stung by Tamoya ohboya is likely higher than the three reported above. Three people were stung by what was believed to be Tamoya ohboya in Barbados over two days around November 3, 2018.

References

Wikidata ☰ Q291544 entry