Visitor From The Deep
Engineer Les Bromley spotted the two-foot-wide rhistoma but had no idea what it was.
"We often go outside to look at the fish and saw this thing caught up in a propeller, I thought it was a carrier bag at first."
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Hide AdLes fished it out with a landing net and discovered it was a dead jellyfish.
Sussex marine expert Steve Savage identified it as a rhistoma, otherwise known as an octopus jellyfish, and said that although it wasn't particularly rare, Les's discovery was quite a large specimen.
"They are very graceful creatures, and quite fascinating to look at," said Steve.
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Hide AdRhistoma jellyfish can grow up to a metre wide and feed on plankton.
Steve explained that in some years, quite a few might be spotted and in others, only one or two, because jellyfish are at the mercy of the currents.