The widespread occurrence and frequent abundance of small hydromedusae suggests that they may play an important role in planktonic communities. However, rather than exhibiting dominant impacts on any specific planktonic group, field studies have demonstrated diverse dietary niches and only modest trophic impacts by small hydromedusae. To understand the functional bases for these patterns, we exposed 2 hydromedusae (Cladonema californicum and Leuckartiara sp.) to a variety of prey types (dinoflagellates, rotifers, barnacle nauplii, copepods and the hydromedusa Obelia sp.) while video-recording predation sequences (encounter, capture, ingestion). Both C. californicum and Leuckartiara sp. ambush prey and possess penetrating nematocysts (stenot...