Jellyfish Have Eyes!

Yes, jellyfish have eyes. In fact, the complex jellyfish eye looks like a variation of the highly evolved human eye!

Some twenty-five years ago in the mid-1980s, midway through my fifty-year career in vision research, I learned that jellyfish have eyes. At the time I was chief of the Laboratory of Molecular and Developmental BiologyNational Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland.

As I ploughed through a book on invertebrate vision on reading, suddenly a life-changing moment arrived: a chapter on eyes of Cnidarians, the invertebrates that include corals, sea anemones and jellyfish.

Most cnidarians are plant-like animals stuck to the ground and don’t have eyes. But jellyfish are a different story.  I was amazed to learn that the cubomedusan jellyfish (known as box jellyfish due to their symmetrical shape) have sophisticated eyes. What most people consider slimy globs that sting if you touch them (the painful sting of the notorious Australian box jelly can be lethal) are actually animals that can see!

3 07, 2015

NEI Scientist Emeritus’s Debut Novel Probes Jellyfish Eyes

By |2020-04-02T21:57:00-04:00July 3rd, 2015|Categories: Blog, Jellyfish Have Eyes!, Joram Piatigorsky Book Reviews|Tags: , |0 Comments

By Kathryn DeMott, NIH Record: NEI scientist emeritus Dr. Joram Piatigorsky remembers the moment he became captivated by jellyfish eyes. He was reading a book about invertebrate vision and there it was—an image of a very familiar-looking eye looking back at him from the most ancient multi-organ animal. The eyes of jellyfish became a focus of his more than four-decade long career at NIH.

20 06, 2015

“Fascinating and delightful”

By |2020-01-07T09:20:02-05:00June 20th, 2015|Categories: Jellyfish Have Eyes!, Reviews & Testimonials|Tags: , |0 Comments

“This highly original story of jellyfish is fascinating and delightful. We travel to a warm mangrove swamp near Puerto Rico with Dr. Ricardo Sztein, who discovers that these fish store evolutionary memories. Troubles abound when his studies are revealed, but the adventures of this quirky, endearing scientist are memorable.”

– Ann L. McLaughlin, author,   Amy & George

20 06, 2015

“Brilliant first novel”

By |2020-01-07T09:45:00-05:00June 20th, 2015|Categories: Jellyfish Have Eyes!, Reviews & Testimonials|Tags: , |0 Comments

"In the author's brilliant first novel, we travel into a tropical lagoon with Dr. Ricardo Sztein, a maverick scientist who is mesmerized by jellyfish. This fast-paced adventure is partly about Dr. Sztein's unusual and fascinating discoveries as he studies his beloved jellyfish. It also raises compelling questions about whether originality and creativity in research are valued or demonized by our government and academia."

– Stanton Samenow, Ph.D., Clinical Psychologist, author,   Inside the Criminal Mind

19 06, 2015

“Interesting on many levels!”

By |2020-01-07T10:02:49-05:00June 19th, 2015|Categories: Jellyfish Have Eyes!, Reviews & Testimonials|0 Comments

A wonderful book! The book's main character is a scientist, an expert on diseases affecting eyes, who becomes fascinated by jellyfish. (They do have eyes…very complex eyes!) The book is interesting on many levels: the value of basic scientific research; the pressure to link research to medical advances in order to obtain funding, and the politics of funding scientific research. I loved the descriptions linking scientific discovery and creativity.

The author, Joran Piatigorsky, is an internationally respected, award-winning scientist whose specialty is the molecular biology of the eye. This is his first novel. I look forward to reading more of his work.

–Deborah Hartman

8 06, 2015

“Ricardo Sztein is an unforgettable character”

By |2020-01-07T10:11:43-05:00June 8th, 2015|Categories: Jellyfish Have Eyes!, Reviews & Testimonials|Tags: , |0 Comments

"This novel draws you into its web of complex circumstances by degrees, unfolding like a kind of scientific experiment; it unravels the entire research and scientific community—challenges the tenets of evolution, knowledge, being and believing. The unity of knowledge, knowledge itself is turned upside down. Ricardo Sztein is an unforgettable character, and this story is definitely a winner."

–Robert Bausch, author,  A Hole in the Earth, and Far as the Eye Can See

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