Bathyphysa conifera was nicknamed the Flying Spaghetti Monster, for the satirical deity of the Internet, by the oil workers who first saw it in 2015.[5] The specific epithetconifera, meaning 'cone-bearing',[6] is due to the shape of the cluster of reproductive structures called gonophores.[1] In Japanese it is called マガタマニラ[4][7] / まがたまにら / 勾玉韮[2]magatamanira, "jewel leek". In Chinese, the nickname "Flying Spaghetti Monster" can be translated as 飞行的面条怪兽fēixíng de miàntiáo guàishòu "flying noodles monster".[8]
Although B. conifera may appear to be an individual organism, each specimen is in fact a colonial organism composed of medusoid and polypoidzooids that are morphologically and functionally specialized.[17] Zooids are multicellular units that develop from a single fertilized egg and combine to create functional colonies able to: reproduce, digest, float, and maintain body positioning.[18]
It has a cystonect body plan,[19] meaning it has a pneumatophore, or float, and siphosome, or line of polyps, but no nectosome, or propulsion medusae.[20] Without that propulsion, B. conifera moves through contracting and relaxing the body stem.[18] It differs from members of the genus Rhizophysa by the presence of ptera, or side "wings", on the young gastrozooids, or feeding polyps.[21][13][14] It is distinct from other members of the genus Bathyphysa as its tentacles do not have any side branches, or tentilla.[19][21][13][14][18] Tentilla are thought to be ancestral to siphonophores, and B. conifera likely lost the trait as did Apolemia.[22][18] The tentacles have stinging cells called nematocysts that are haploneme, or uniform in thickness, and have a single size of isorhiza, or anchoring nematocysts.[22]
The entire animal, including tentacles, is several meters long.[14] The feeding polyps are pink when young, before developing tentacles.[14] A mature feeding polyp is yellow with a single tentacle.[14]
Colonies are unisexual,[14] and reproduce by incomplete asexual reproduction.[18] Not much more is known about B. conifera reproduction. Early development of cystonects is not known either.[23] Siphonophores generally start life as a single-celled zygote, which divided and grows into a single polyp called a protozooid.[23][18] The protozooid then divides by budding into all the zooids of the colony.[23] The zooids are homologous to individual animals, but are connected physiologically to each other.[18]
^ abStuder, Théophile Rudolphe (13 July 1878). von Siebold, Carl Theodor; von Kölliker, Albert; Ehlers, Ernst (eds.). "Ueber Siphonophoren des tiefen Wassers" [About siphonophores of deep water]. Zeitschrift für Wissenschaftliche Zoologie (in German). 31: 4–14. Archived from the original on 26 September 2022. Retrieved 26 September 2022.
^ ab山田真弓. "マガタマニラ". コトバンク (in Japanese). Asahi Shimbun Company / VOYAGE GROUP, Inc. Archived from the original on 2 December 2017. Retrieved 3 September 2017. マガタマニラ まがたまにら / 勾玉韮 [学]Bathyphysa grimaldi
^Griffith, Chuck (2005). "Dictionary of Botanical Epithets". Dictionary of Botanical Epithets. Archived from the original on 19 September 2017. Retrieved 5 September 2017. conifer conifera coniferum cone bearing conus con noun/m κωνοϛ cone i i cnct connective vowel used by botanical Latin fer fer apar fero to bear, carry, bring
^沈姝华 (2015-08-13). 王晓易 (ed.). 非洲海岸现不明深海生物 被取名"飞行面条怪兽". 163.com (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 6 September 2017. Retrieved 2 September 2017.
^Costello, Mark J.; Emblow, Chris; White, Richard, eds. (2001). "Ctenophora". European register of marine species: a check-list of the marine species in Europe and a bibliography of guides to their identification. Patrimoines Naturels. Vol. 50. Paris: Muséum national d'histoire naturelle. p. 122. hdl:2292/19517. ISBN978-2-85653-538-7. ISSN1281-6213. Order Cystonectae Family Physaliidae Family Rhizophysidae Bathyphysa conifera (Studer, 1878) A
^Cairns, Stephen D.; Calder, Dale R.; Brinckmann-Voss, Anita; Castro, Clovis B.; Fautin, Daphne G.; Pugh, Philip R.; Mills, Claudia E.; Jaap, Walter C.; Arai, Mary N.; Haddock, Steven H. D.; Opresko, Dennis M. (2002). Common and Scientific Names of Aquatic Invertebrates from the United States and Canada: Cnidaria and Ctenophora (Second ed.). Bethesda, Maryland: American Fisheries Society. pp. 29, 61. ISBN978-1-888569-39-1. ISSN0097-0638.
^ abcJones, Daniel O.B., Gates, A.R., Curry, R.A., Thomson, M., Pile, A., Benfield, M. (Eds) (2009). SERPENT project. Media database archive. Available online at http://archive.serpentproject.com/2621/Archived 2017-06-25 at the Wayback Machine accessed on Fri Sep 01 2017
^ abcPacific, Aquarium of the. "Pelagic Siphonophore". www.aquariumofpacific.org. Archived from the original on 2019-10-18. Retrieved 2020-03-10.
^ abcdefghMunro, Catriona; Siebert, Stefan; Zapata, Felipe; Howison, Mark; Damian Serrano, Alejandro; Church, Samuel H.; Goetz, Freya E.; Pugh, Philip R.; Haddock, Steven H.D.; Dunn, Casey W. (2018-01-20). "Improved phylogenetic resolution within Siphonophora (Cnidaria) with implications for trait evolution". bioRxiv10.1101/251116.
^ abcJanssen, John; Gibbs Jr., Robert H.; Pugh, Phil R. (27 February 1989). "Association of Caristius sp. (Pisces: Caristiidae) with a siphonophore, Bathyphysa conifera". Copeia. 1989 (1): 198–201. doi:10.2307/1445624. JSTOR1445624.