Beroe ovata is a comb jelly in the family Beroidae. It is found in the South Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea and has been introduced into the Black Sea, the Aegean Sea, the Sea of Azov and the Caspian Sea. It was first described by the French physician and zoologist Jean Guillaume Bruguière in 1789.
^Collins, Allen G. (2014). "Beroe ovata Bruguière, 1789". WoRMS. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 2015-03-12.
Beroeovata is a comb jelly in the family Beroidae. It is found in the South Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea and has been introduced into the...
accidental introduction of the Mnemiopsis-eating North American ctenophore Beroeovata, and by a cooling of the local climate from 1991 to 1993, which significantly...
some measure of control was achieved when another predatory comb jelly, Beroeovata, was introduced. Mnemiopsis leidyi was first recorded in the Mediterranean...
population. In 1997 another ctenophore species arrived—Beroeovata, a predator of Mnemiopsis leidyi. The Beroe population underwent an initial explosion, until...
of ctenophore known as Beroeovata. However, evidence suggests that this is the result of a secondary infection and that B. ovata is not the first or intended...
sources and eating the young and eggs. Biological control was tried with Beroeovata, another comb jelly, with some degree of success; it appears as if a...