Blue Sea Dragon and Blue Button

Dec. 22, 2023

Two venomous marine organisms, Blue sea dragon and Blue Button, usually found in deep sea were recently spotted at Chennai’s shoreline by beachgoers.

Why in the News?

  • These deep-sea creatures could get pushed to shore sometimes due to a storm or some oceanic conditions.
  • The recently-hit Cyclone Michaung would be the reason why Blue Sea Dragons and Blue Buttons were thrown off the Chennai coast. 

About Blue Sea Dragon:

  • Also known as the blue angel and blue sea slug, is a unique underwater creature that has the ability to camouflage.
  • Scientific Name: Glaucus atlanticus
  • It is a sea slug, a class of marine organisms that are shell-less molluscs with a wide range of colours and shapes. 
  • Distribution: Mostly found throughout the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans in tropical and subtropical waters.
  • Often spotted in deep oceans, Blue Sea Dragons would go in groups, which gave them the name 'Blue Fleets'.
  • It would store venom that it consumes from other creatures to inject venom on the foreign bodies they come into contact. But the venom isn’t lethal.

About Blue Button:

  • Blue Buttons, resembling button-like shapes, are not singular organisms but colonies of small predators called hydroids.
  • These colonies float “passively” along the ocean, “performing specialised roles– stinging and preying, defending the colony from predators, and producing more of their kind.
  • Scientific Name: Porpita
  • They are often confused with jellyfish.
  • Distribution: Found in the tropical and subtropical waters of the Pacific, Atlantic, and Indian Oceans.
  • Blue Button has a blue float made of a flat, circular disc with many gas-filled tubes that keep it afloat. The disc is surrounded by tiny blue tentacles.
  • They have a ‘man of war’ mechanism, which means that they use the tentacles like body parts to sting any foreign body that comes into contact to defend themselves.
  • Their venom isn’t lethal.