Respuesta :

Answer:

Like all true jellies, the moon jelly's tentacles are covered with specialized stinging cells, called cnidocytes. ... They have very little nutritional value, however, so the predators that specialize on them must eat hundreds and hundreds of these jellies in order to maintain their required energy levels. Moon jellies stay close to shore, and they pulse their bell to keep themselves near the surface, with their tentacles pointed down. This ensures they can gather as much food as possible. They gather food when it gets stuck in the mucus along the bottom of the bell.

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Answer:

While it might be nice to grow the missing part back, doing so takes a lot of energy that simply may not be available. For the moon jelly, it takes less energy to simply rearrange the parts in its gelatinous body into a new symmetrical and hydrodynamically efficient configuration and keep moving along on its journey.

Hope this help you!:)