The enigmatic blue button (Porpita porpita), a small colonial hydrozoan that floats passively on the ocean’s surface, has long captivated marine biologists with its delicate and jewel-like appearance. Contrary to initial impressions as a solitary jellyfish, this creature is actually a complex assemblage of specialized zooids, tiny individual animals functioning together as a single integrated colony. Recent research from the University of Tokyo’s Misaki Marine Biological Station has shed groundbreaking light on its lifespan and growth mechanisms, revealing that blue buttons may drift on surface waters for several years—far exceeding previous assumptions that their longevity was under one year.
Blue buttons measure only between four to five centimeters in diameter, which coupled with their drifting lifestyle on the open sea, made them notoriously difficult to study. Their fragile nature and the challenge of sustaining them alive outside their natural environment have hindered comprehensive understanding of their biology. However, the research team led by Associate Professor Kohei Oguchi and postdoctoral researcher Daiki Wakita has achieved a significant breakthrough by maintaining multiple blue button colonies alive in controlled aquatic settings for up to 21 days. This advance enabled detailed observation and mathematical age estimation impossible before.
The blue button is fundamentally a colonial organism, composed of different types of zooids embedded on a round chitinous float filled with air chambers. This float functions akin to a life raft on the water’s surface, supporting the various zooids each specialized for distinct biological tasks. Among these, dactylozooids capture prey, feeding the colony; gonozooids regulate reproductive functions; and the gastrozooid, concealed centrally, handles digestion, distributing nutrients throughout the colony. The division of labor within this miniature aquatic society allows the organism to thrive despite relentless exposure to oceanic elements.
Previous attempts to keep blue buttons in captivity met with limited success because replicating their natural habitat conditions proved challenging. The team at Misaki Marine Biological Station systematically tested variables including container size, seawater temperature spanning 18 to 25 degrees Celsius, light exposure, water flow, and nutrition. Ultimately, a simple regimen proved effective: a 30-centimeter diameter container filled with filtered seawater, changed daily, placed in ambient natural light, and fed small shrimps. This minimalist approach allowed consistent survival and growth monitoring.
To estimate the colonies’ ages, Wakita applied a von Bertalanffy growth model—a mathematical framework traditionally used for fish and coral growth assessments. By photographing blue buttons at collection and after two to three weeks of captive maintenance, the researchers measured changes in the colony radius. They extrapolated that a 4-millimeter radius corresponds to roughly three months of age, while colonies at 12 millimeters measured about one year old. Remarkably, larger specimens reaching 23 millimeters suggested an average age of five years, indicating a far longer life cycle than previously recognized.
An equally intriguing finding emerged from their examination of the chitinous float supporting the colony. The float exhibits concentric ring formations akin to tree rings. Contrary to earlier uncertainties, Oguchi and colleagues discovered that the blue button’s float expands by adding new rings sequentially from the outermost periphery, rather than by enlarging existing layers. This peripheral ring growth provides valuable insights into the structural development and resilience of the float, which must withstand continuous mechanical and environmental stresses at the ocean surface.
The implications of this research extend beyond biological curiosity. Understanding the longevity and growth patterns of neustonic organisms like Porpita porpita enhances comprehension of surface water ecosystems, which play a vital role in biogeochemical cycles and marine biodiversity. Blue button colonies participate in nutrient cycling, serve as prey for diverse marine species, and may be indicators of oceanic surface conditions. Extended longevity suggests they can influence these ecological dynamics over longer time spans than previously anticipated.
Despite the successes achieved, full comprehension of the blue button’s life history remains incomplete. Oguchi’s team aspires to close this knowledge gap by eventually rearing blue buttons through their entire lifecycle, from larval stages to senescence. His research group focuses on the developmental biology underpinning zooid differentiation within the colony and the degree to which these units integrate to function as a coordinated superorganism. Such studies promise to illuminate fundamental principles of colonial organismal biology, morphogenesis, and evolution.
This pioneering research demonstrates how a blend of careful fieldwork, controlled laboratory experimentation, and mathematical modeling can overcome longstanding challenges in marine biology. The ability to sustain blue button colonies ex vivo now unlocks possibilities for experimental manipulation and detailed physiological studies previously unattainable. These advances pave the way for broader investigations into the biology of other surface-dwelling hydrozoans and their ecological roles in the pelagic environment.
The blue button’s unique biology and extended drifting lifespan serve as a reminder of the ocean’s untapped mysteries. From a mere glimpse at the sea’s surface, intricate colonial organisms traverse vast distances and persist through changing conditions, continuing an ancient existence integral to marine ecosystems. Research initiatives like those at the University of Tokyo bring us ever closer to unlocking these stories of survival and adaptation on the blue frontier.
As our oceans face growing pressures from climate change and pollution, characterizing the life strategies of conspicuous yet enigmatic inhabitants like Porpita porpita becomes increasingly important. Not only do these findings enrich fundamental scientific knowledge, but they also lay groundwork for monitoring ocean health and biodiversity through sentinel species at the air-sea interface. This work stimulates further inquiry into the delicate balances sustaining surface neustonic communities worldwide.
In sum, the University of Tokyo team’s innovative strategies have revised our understanding of the blue button’s lifespan and developmental biology, demonstrating its multi-year persistence on the ocean surface and clarifying mechanisms governing float growth. These findings mark a significant advance in neustonic hydrozoan biology and open exciting avenues for future research into their ecological significance and life cycle intricacies.
Subject of Research: Animals
Article Title: A neustonic hydrozoan Porpita porpita drifts for over a year
News Publication Date: 20-May-2026
References:
Daiki Wakita, Kaho Murai, Gaku Yamamoto, Ryota Tamada, Hisanori Kohtsuka, Kohei Oguchi. “A neustonic hydrozoan Porpita porpita drifts for over a year.” Scientific Reports, May 20, 2026. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-026-49897-y
Image Credits: 2026 D. Wakita et al.
Keywords: Porpita porpita, blue button, hydrozoan, neustonic organism, marine biology, colony lifespan, zooids, chitinous float, von Bertalanffy growth model, marine invertebrates, ocean surface ecosystem, life cycle, developmental biology

