To everyone saying this is cruel, I’ll simplify it to you: Jellyfishes don’t have brains, witch means they can’t see, smell or feel pain. They basically just live to eat and swim, and a small environment won’t harm them in any way. A literal plant or Mosquito is more intelligent than these.
It doesn’t matter it’s all about how we see and respect animals......no matter how dumb they might be.....animals like insects etc. Are the most important creatures for our ecosystem and we humans trade them like sh*t. Would you put a retarded or disabled human in a cage, because he’s/she’s unable to do things that we can do? It makes me sick that people like you exist on this planet.
Ruby Abc A jellyfish is not a human, not even remotely close to it. A disabled person has a brain, it thinks and feels, a jellyfish does not and never will, IT HAS NO BRAIN. It’s scientifically proven that these do not need a big environment to live, what they need is a healthy diet and clean water, and that I’m sure their owner gives plenty off.
Well if you do that, it wouldn't be long 'fore you're looking at circle paper cutouts coloured in pink and tied to strings that you psychotically move about with your fingers for entertainment and a needle sticking out of your back. Stay in school kids.
Everyone is saying the tank is too small... while usually I would agree, the Jellyfish dont care. As long as they are being fed and the water gets cleaned properly they are happy. They usually just go with the current of water and dont care how big the space they are swimming in is.
I wouldnt reccmond anyone who isnt higly experienced in saltwater fish and coral keeping to buy one of these set ups. Jellyfish are very sensitive, even little change in water chemistry will kill them
I had a small 30 gallon tank and grew coral in it. Just out of curiosity how often would you need to do a water change on a tank with just jellyfish in it?
@@bluesurge6 honestly never got into saltwater, considering jelly fish dont really produce much waiste mabe like 25 percent twice a week to keep it perfect
"How can you tell jellies can't think, do you think you know everything?" or "What if they used a new method of thinking we don't know yet?" Do these people live in the same world as me? I can't blame them for not knowing and thinking about the wellbeing of animals, but damn that's some pretty dumb argument
They probably can think, but this will be ok for them and im not even saying that this is one of the bigger aquariums. Plus probably only jellyfish that can see, is from the fammily of box jellyfish, but those ones are venomous so They will not be in home aquarium. Idk if all of them r venomous, but still.
Предположу, что данным роликом занимался менеджер направления стран СНГ. Просто, в странах СНГ данная тема еще не набрала должную популярность, нежели в более развитых странах.
Alexey Matroskin, Предположу, что всё гораздо проще, страны СНГ достаточно развиты, чтобы не вестись на подобные "темы", в отличие от "более развитых стран". Аквариумом здесь можно удивить только любителя аппле и последней версии айфона.
Wow people in the comments are being so dumb. A jellyfish responds to its environment the same way a venus flytrap does... just cause it's moving doesn't mean it can think or suffer. IDK why there is even a argument about this tank anyway, when the sides are smooth and round(ie incapable of injuring the jelly), and jellyfish don't even have eyes to see their surroundings, receptors to feel it, or a brain to experience it, so basically it has no idea it's in a tank... because it has no ideas on anything ever. Even oysters have brains. Jellyfish literally feel nothing. If you think keeping jellyfish, who can't experience anything, in a tank is unethical or cruel... then why don't you go start commenting on a video of pet birds or goldfish or dogs or cats instead. Because those actually have brains and can experience suffering. Whereas this is about as cruel as keeping a plant in a pot. Which is to say... it's not cruel in the slightest. My one and only concern watching this, is the source of the moon jellies, were they wild caught or captive bred? No not for the "caging a wild animal" idea (because remember no brains, so it wouldn't even know if it was wild), but because it could be affecting a ecosystem somewhere if you are removing large numbers of predators to sell to hobyists.
Samm Dechand Ceramic filter media.They cultivate bacteria that eat harmful waste produced by the jellyfish and turn them into something less harmful nitrate.Nitrogen cycle. Ammonia -> nitrite -> nitrate
And that's precisely what they do best :D No really they can't think or even feel enough things to understand where they are and what they do, so it isn't a problem for them to be in such a small space
Elles ne possèdent pas d'organes (et même pas suffisamment de neurones) pour avoir la moindre idée d'où elles sont, c'est vraiment juste des sacs plastiques qui bougent et piquent, donc il n'y a littéralement aucun problème pour elles là où elles sont :) (c'est pas le cas de toutes les méduses mais celles-ci y a pas de soucis)
Saguilar Rare Tu pourrais détailler ? Je pense pas avoir été méchant ^^' Si c'est la partie sur les sacs plastiques qui coince, j'ai pas dis ça pour être "dégradant" envers les méduses, c'est juste ce qu'elles font, elles flottent et filtrent l'eau qui passe par leurs tentacules pour manger et c'est tout
Everybody is complaining about the size, but with moon jellies that's generally pretty understandable. Moon jellies are fairly small and would be fine in a tank like that. However, I am wondering why there is no cycling done before hand?
That was the first thing I wondered about, too. Other guides recommend to leave the aquarium running without fish or jellyfish 2 weeks (1 with the use of special starter bacteria). Some comments below Designjellyfish.com said this too, but in the video it looks like the jellyfish are added immediately.