Determining the reproduction of the
S. gigantea is difficult considering how rare sightings are. It has been noted that young captured
S. gigantea looked like an exact miniature of the adult. Above this band, there is a germinal line that forms a shallow groove with different
epithelial cells that are more cubical in shape with large, rounded
nuclei. Irregular placement of the cells in small pits (small clumps of cells, similar to cyst) along the germinal line produce a multiplication of epithelial cells that create a deep
invagination. This is the first stage leading to the reproduction of
S. gigantea. The cyst grows with a pointed end on the subumbrella side. As its size increases, it pushes out the brood chamber wall and into the cavity of the chamber. Simultaneously on the opposite end, two outgrowths develop horizontally, making the cyst into a "T" shape. This protrudes more and more as size increases, taking the brood chamber with it. Eventually, a thin membrane forms and the cyst enters the stomach cavity. Within the cyst, a scyphistoma—a single developing medusa—forms and is now called a chorion. Once the chorion grows into about long and in diameter with teat-shaped distal ends (which are basal outgrowths), it begins to be pushed out of the chamber. Within the chorion capsule, differentiation and formation begins. The inner epithelial wall is directly from the parent tissue and is pocketed into its distal tips that will eventually become the
S. giganteas arms. As the "baby" medusa grows, it takes the shape of the capsule. In order to escape, the well-developed "baby" medusa will detach from the subumbrella wall where it was already slightly protruding. It then exits through the gastric cavity and out the parent's mouth. The baby medusa soon become free-swimming
planules, then polyps or
scyphistomae that reproduce asexually through budding or podocysts. These are what become larval medusae that feed on plankton. Eventually, it will grow into the size of an adult. It is inferred that reproduction of
S. gigantea is continuous with one parent estimated to produce fifty to one hundred medusa. == Notes ==