User:Connorreilly35/sandbox

Appearance
The appearance of Gonionemus vertens is usually described as having an transparent bell lined with up to 90 tentacles and colored gonads; orange, red, or violet if the specimen is female or yellow-brown if it is male. The gonads are arranged hanging from four radial canals so that when viewed from above, the gonads are lined perpandicularly. The manubrium, colored tan, hangs down in the middle. The whole jellyfish is only about 2.5 cm (1 inch) in diameter. The species is often found clinging to seaweed or eelgrass giving it the nickname The Clinging Jellyfish.

Distribution
In the United States, Gonionemus vertens specimen have been found on the Pacific coast, from The Aleutian Islands to Southern California, and on the Atlantic coast, from Massachusetts to North Carolina. In Asian waters they have been reported from northern Zhejiang, the Sea of Japan, Olga Bay and the northern Japanese Islands. And in Europe: from The Mediterranean Sea to Norway.

Gonionemus vertens has in addition been reported to be very vemonous in waters near Japan and Russia, and harmless in the Atlantic.