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by
Marlowe Starling
keeps time in its own way. biologists netted a pea-size jellyfish with an unusual circadian clock, a chance finding that suggests there are likely more overlooked biological timekeeping mechanisms to be discovered...
These naturally driven, 24-hour biological cycles are known as circadian rhythms, and they do more than cue bedtime:
Lacking watches, many species keep time using an internal system - a set of interacting genes and their protein products that effectively keeps track of a 24-hour period - that is calibrated by sunlight.
This kind of circadian clock is widespread, found even in single-celled algae, which suggests that biological timekeeping evolved billions of years ago.
Across animals, most species have the same genetic system, using
genes known as
CLOCK,
BMAL1, and
CRY, or recognizable homologues.
This form of biological clock mechanism appears even in ancient
lineages, including sponges and some jellyfish.
In a pea-size jelly off the coast of Japan, biologists are examining
a different kind of timekeeping.
Yet a newly discovered hydrozoan jellyfish species has a mysterious circadian clock that regularly tracks 20-hour periods, suggesting that its mechanism evolved independently.
The findings (An Emerging Clock Mechanism in a Hydrozoan Jellyfish), published in PLOS Biology in January 2026, push the limits of what chronobiologists consider "circadian."
The clock found in this jellyfish, a new species to science, is unusual not only because it tracks 20 hours, instead of Earth's 24-hour day length, but also because it seems to be paired with a molecular timer that counts down from sunrise until it's time for the jellyfish to spawn.
This surprising mechanism suggests that scientists may be overlooking unconventional clocks across the tree of life.
There, thousands of translucent orbs smaller than peas bob in the water column below the fishing dock.
He and his students collect these jellyfish specimens, representing
more than a dozen species, and rear them in the lab to study their
reproductive cycles.
as seen from Izushima, a small offshore island
inhabited by only a few dozen
fishers and shellfish farmers.
Observing jellyfish gametes develop under a microscope lured him away from the neat logic of physics and chemistry and into the dynamic processes of biology.
Later, he joined Deguchi's lab to study invertebrate development and dedicated his master's thesis to jellyfish reproduction, homing in on an unusual population among the specimens.
Many of Deguchi's jellyfish spawned daily, releasing their eggs and sperm into the water, usually shortly after sunrise.
But these jellyfish were odd:
For species that reproduce through mass spawning, including some corals and jellyfish, accurate timekeeping is crucial.
They release gametes directly into the water, leaving fertilization to chance:
So these species have evolved various molecular mechanisms to sync
up their spawning, often using proteins that sense and respond to
light signals.
But the absence of an obvious light trigger made the night-spawning
behavior a puzzle.
at Miyagi University of Education in Japan, Ruka Kitsui (right) became captivated by Yu Murakami
First he kept female jellyfish in a cycle of 12 hours of artificial light and 12 hours of darkness - roughly reflecting the natural day-night cycle at Izushima.
Each time, precisely two hours after "dusk," female jellies released
their eggs into the water.
This suggested that the previously unknown jellyfish species - dubbed Clytia sp. IZ-D until it receives a formal name - had some kind of internally driven circadian rhythm.
Kitsui knew that C. sp. IZ-D's clock wasn't made of the clock genes widespread in animals.
This hydrozoan lineage had lost those over evolutionary time. Yet it fit nearly all the requirements that chronobiologists have described for circadian clocks.
Tiny jellyfish of the newly discovered species C. sp. IZ-D circulate in a round tank (left). Tsuyoshi Momose (right), a developmental biologist at the French National Center for Scientific Research, lent his expertise on a related species to study
how its novel timekeeping
mechanism works.
It must also be regulated by an environmental stimulus such as light; while the jellies' spawning clock can run on a 20-hour cycle under persistent light in the lab, in nature it resets every day.
And a true circadian rhythm, like ours, should also be unaffected by temperature.
In Kitsui's experiments, however, warmer water made the 20-hour clock faster and cooler water made it slower.
It is a molecular biological clock, but not in the way scientists typically define them.
Is it a true circadian rhythm if it breaks any of the three rules?
But the 20-hour circadian clock couldn't fully explain the jellies' sunset spawning behavior.
There had to be another piece to this clockwork mechanism.
C. hemisphaerica is visually identical to C. sp. IZ-D, with a transparent bell and long, trailing tentacles. Crucially, it is a well-studied animal model, and the details of its spawning and reproduction are well known.
Eager for answers, they pulled in their friend Tsuyoshi Momose,
a developmental biologist at the French National Center for
Scientific Research and an expert on the species. Clytia hemisphaerica, a model species for invertebrate reproduction, has two phases:
sessile polyp (left) and
free-floating medusa (right),
This process begins with the day's first light, when photoreceptive
proteins called opsins in the gonads detect sunlight,
triggering production of a hormone that matures developing gametes.
Once enough of the hormone has accumulated and the gametes have fully developed, the jellies spawn simultaneously - roughly two hours after sunset, like clockwork.
Next, Momose, Deguchi, and Kitsui plan to compare the genomes of C. hemisphaerica and C. sp. IZ-D to explore the molecular mechanisms at play in the 20-hour quasi-circadian clock and the 14-hour sunrise countdown timer.
And in April 2026, Kitsui will start a doctorate program focused on
clam reproduction at Tohoku University, where he can continue
describing the quirks of invertebrate development.
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