They don't have a brain or spinal cord. They float around in a way that often appears aimless. Though jellyfish lack a central nervous system, these gelatinous creatures again show that they might think more than we think they do.
Jellyfish, or medusae, belong to the group Cnidaria, members of which are already known to be capable of associative learning. This is how they can maintain awareness of their surroundings (and possible predators). Now, an international team of scientists has found that the cnidarians are capable of a slightly more advanced type of associative learning known as operant conditioning, which entails remembering the positive or negative effects of a previous action. Despite lacking a brain, Caribbean box jellies (Tripedalia cystophora) can still learn from their mistakes to avoid a potentially disastrous outcome.
Damage control
T. cystophora are about the size of a human fingernail, and while they are much less complex than vertebrates such as humans, they still have a rather sophisticated visual system for a jellyfish. The jellies have 24 eyes around their bodies—and they need them. They live in mangrove swamps where crashing into long roots is almost inevitable in murky water, and a jelly might do serious damage to its delicate body in these encounters. Its vision assists it in navigating among the roots and can be especially useful for hunting around these gnarly tangles.
This inspired Jan Bielecki of Kiel University in Germany and his research team to simulate that environment in a lab to see how the jellyfish would handle it. More specifically, they wanted to determine if the jellies could learn from making mistakes.
“Several mechanisms can shape behavioral plasticity, but the influence of previous experience—memory formation and learning—is undoubtedly among the most important,” Bielecki and his colleagues said in a study recently published in Current Biology.
To put the jellies’ obstacle avoidance behavior (OAB) to the test, the researchers covered the walls of a round tank in stripes that would appear similar to the roots in the creatures’ natural habitat, with white stripes mimicking nearby roots and gray stripes appearing as if they were further away. From the perspective of a jellyfish, the gray stripes would look like something they didn’t have to worry about immediately, even though they were located at the same distance as the white ones.