@thuyome_09: Por tu maldito amor#VicenteFernandez #portumalditoamor #musicas

🎶Yosmery🎶
🎶Yosmery🎶
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Region: DO
Friday 23 June 2023 00:43:23 GMT
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valenti_na.7
🫧Tini🌸 :
faltaste a la promesa de adorarnos 🥀
2025-04-07 00:41:05
2
dimuzaa
DIMUZÁ :
Y YA PA QUE QUIEROOO LA TUMBAAA, SI YA ME ENTERRASTE EN VIDA 🥹
2024-02-17 16:20:36
58
gut2_linda
𝐿𝒾𝓃𝒹𝒶  :
faltaste ala promesa de adorarnoss🥺
2024-12-21 13:31:01
3
alexdeleon095
King_Alexander💣👑 :
el día que te encontré me enamore 😍😍😍
2025-04-28 02:04:42
0
fierro_alisson
Fierro🐊 :
😭😭😭 amoo este tema 😭
2023-08-11 02:59:00
16
_claugarcia_
𝐶𝑙𝑎𝑢𝑑𝑖𝑎 ✨ :
PA' QUE QUIERO LA RUMBA !!!? 🗣️
2024-10-12 22:19:12
0
katherinespinoza77
Katherin Espinoza :
😭 pero está canción
2023-08-16 20:31:59
1
vani.catalan0
Vanessa miranda :
Que temaso❤️‍🩹
2024-03-18 01:49:21
2
salometorresdj
DJ SALOME :
Nunca lo negue💔💔
2024-09-26 05:42:43
2
kerlinbedoya
D A H I A N A🌸 :
Este es mi pley🥹
2023-07-29 06:41:55
5
juan.daniel.naved4
Ju@n≈ :
yo veía está película con mi abuela 😔😢😢
2024-09-14 18:21:46
0
https._stephanie15
𝒩𝒾𝓃𝒾✮ :
era la canción favorita de mi abuelito 🥹💔
2024-11-02 13:40:34
2
mero_mero_patron
El MERO MERO PATRON🤠🥳 :
Enserió por primera vez me estoy enamorando pero creo q ella no aunque ya me dijo q me quiere yo se q no :( pero la.amo demasiado por ella dejaría cualquier cosa y aunque me diga mandacho ami no me n
2024-07-11 09:41:17
2
moniika096
moniKa. :
@Marlon Diaz787 😏
2023-07-27 16:24:38
1
ivan.cruz.olivares
Ivan Goku :
😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢
2024-02-26 23:15:44
2
saraaa_valenciaa
Sara. :
:(
2023-07-14 16:59:33
2
angiecarolina718
angie carolina :
💕🥺🥺
2023-07-07 21:31:32
2
danielareyez111
daniii🥰 :
🥰🥰🥰😳😅😅
2023-06-23 23:16:12
2
user4863442950115
user4863442950115 :
🥺🥺
2023-06-23 19:44:08
2
_chavarria_503_
zuly :
😩😩😩😩😩😩😩
2024-02-20 04:27:35
1
maravasquez53
maravasquez53 :
💔💔💔
2024-02-13 01:51:11
1
dayana_suram4613
valentina 💕 :
@edvinmayen402
2024-02-01 02:18:20
1
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Other Videos

Now you know.  If you've ever encountered the enigmatic Blue Button creature, you might have pondered its identity and functionality. Frequently found along the 30A beaches, Porpita Porpita, commonly known as the Blue Button Jellyfish, presents seven intriguing facts: Not a jellyfish, but a Chondrophore colony of Hydrozoan Polyps. The Blue Button bears resemblance to a jellyfish but is closer in nature to the Siphonophore Portuguese Man O' War. Encountered along the 30A beaches and in various oceans, it's officially named Porpita Porpita. Comprising two primary components: The Float and the Hydroid Colony. The Float, the primary body, boasts a round, disc-like shape with a golden brown hue. The Hydroid Colony resembles tentacles, often seen in bright blue, turquoise, or yellow shades, each ending in Nematocysts, stinging cells. Features a peculiar waste release mechanism. Beneath the float lies the entrance for food and exit for waste. Blue Buttons primarily feed on copepods and crustacean larvae while being preyed upon by sea slugs and sea-snails. Diverse functions within the species. This species consists of individual zooids that collectively float on the water's surface, each serving distinct roles such as protector, reproducer, and foraging for food. Hermaphroditic by nature. Blue Buttons are hermaphrodites, possessing both male and female sex organs, enabling them to reproduce independently. Reproductive polyps release eggs and sperm into the water, leading to fertilization and the development of larvae into adult polyps. Floaters, not swimmers. Blue Buttons, or Porpita Porpita, are surface dwellers, drifting freely with the wind, currents, and tides. Their gaseous bodies restrict them from swimming to significant depths, unlike true jellyfish. Admire but refrain from touching. Contact with these creatures should be avoided as they can cause skin irritation, although they are generally non-threatening. Blue Buttons typically wash ashore during the summer months, propelled by winds, currents, and tides. #underthesea #hopethathelps
Now you know. If you've ever encountered the enigmatic Blue Button creature, you might have pondered its identity and functionality. Frequently found along the 30A beaches, Porpita Porpita, commonly known as the Blue Button Jellyfish, presents seven intriguing facts: Not a jellyfish, but a Chondrophore colony of Hydrozoan Polyps. The Blue Button bears resemblance to a jellyfish but is closer in nature to the Siphonophore Portuguese Man O' War. Encountered along the 30A beaches and in various oceans, it's officially named Porpita Porpita. Comprising two primary components: The Float and the Hydroid Colony. The Float, the primary body, boasts a round, disc-like shape with a golden brown hue. The Hydroid Colony resembles tentacles, often seen in bright blue, turquoise, or yellow shades, each ending in Nematocysts, stinging cells. Features a peculiar waste release mechanism. Beneath the float lies the entrance for food and exit for waste. Blue Buttons primarily feed on copepods and crustacean larvae while being preyed upon by sea slugs and sea-snails. Diverse functions within the species. This species consists of individual zooids that collectively float on the water's surface, each serving distinct roles such as protector, reproducer, and foraging for food. Hermaphroditic by nature. Blue Buttons are hermaphrodites, possessing both male and female sex organs, enabling them to reproduce independently. Reproductive polyps release eggs and sperm into the water, leading to fertilization and the development of larvae into adult polyps. Floaters, not swimmers. Blue Buttons, or Porpita Porpita, are surface dwellers, drifting freely with the wind, currents, and tides. Their gaseous bodies restrict them from swimming to significant depths, unlike true jellyfish. Admire but refrain from touching. Contact with these creatures should be avoided as they can cause skin irritation, although they are generally non-threatening. Blue Buttons typically wash ashore during the summer months, propelled by winds, currents, and tides. #underthesea #hopethathelps

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