You searched for: “cnidarian tentacle
cnidarian tentacle (nigh DAR ee uhn) (s) (noun), cnidarian tentacles (pl)
1. Corals, jellyfish, sea anemones, and hydras (several small freshwater animals), having naked cylindrical bodies and oral openings surrounded by armlike parts: Cnidarian tentacles consist of rings of elongated and flexible extensions which are used to capture food and to defend themselves against predators.

Cells in the cnidarian tentacles and in the outer body surfaces are armed with stinging, harpoon-like structures called "nematocysts" which contain toxins that can cause their victims to have paralysis.

2. Etymology: from Greek cnidaria, "nettle" and refers to the stinging structures that are characteristic of these animals.
—Compiled from information located in
Holt Biology, Visualizing Life by George B. Johnson;
Holt, Rinehart and Winston; New York; 1998; page 481.
This entry is located in the following unit: tentacu-, tentac- (page 1)