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Strange Animals of the Ocean

Strange Animals of the Ocean

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Strange Animals of the Ocean. Pink Sea-Through Fantasia. The pink see-through fantasia is a sea cucumber, found about a mile and a half deep in the Celebes Sea in the western Pacific (east of Borneo). The Squidworm. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Strange Animals of the Ocean

Page 2: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Pink Sea-Through Fantasia

• The pink see-through fantasia is a sea cucumber, found about a mile and a half deep in the Celebes Sea in the western Pacific (east of Borneo).

Page 3: Strange Animals of the Ocean

The Squidworm

• Found in the Celebes Sea, this worm is, well ... this worm seems confused. Scientists call it a squidworm. (No, not Squidward.)

Page 4: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Sea Angel

• We wouldn't be surprised to find that sea angels are in the same family as, say, the mythological Sirens. They're called angels, but are actually a predatory sea snail. This particular specimen, Platybrachium antarcticum, "flies through the deep Antarctic waters hunting the shelled pteropods (another type of snail) on which it feeds," according to the Marine Census of Life.

Page 5: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Marrus Orthocanna• Like a multi-stage rocket, this bizarre

microscopic creature, Marrus orthocanna is made up of multiple repeated units, including tentacles and multiple stomachs. Never heard of a physonect siphonophore? That's what this is. It's something like a jellyfish, and is more closely related to the Portugese man o'war. One interesting thing about it: Like ants, a colony made up of many individuals has attributes resembling a single organism.

Page 6: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Flamingo Tongue Snail• With a name like Flamingo tongue

snail, and the flamboyant coloration to match, you might think that this Cyphoma gibbosum has a shell worthy of collecting. Not so. All its color comes from the soft parts of its body, which envelope its shell unless it's threatened. This specimen was photographed feeding on soft corrals near Grand Cayman in the British West Indies.

Page 7: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Vampire Squid

Page 8: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Leafy Seadragon• Found along the

southwestern coast of Australia, the leafy seadragon, Phycodurus eques, uses its fins not only to propel it through the water, but as camouflage to resemble a piece of drifting seaweed

Page 9: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Kiwa, God of Shellfish, Crab• This furry-clawed crab appeared

so unusual when scientists discovered it 5,000-feet deep on a hydrothermal vent south of Easter Island that they designated it not only a new genus, Kiwa, but a new family, Kiwidae – both named for the mythological Polynesian goddess of shellfish. It's likely blind and may use bacteria in its furry claws to de-toxify its food.

Page 10: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Terrible Claw Lobster

• Only four other individuals, in two species, had been found previously, both in Australia. The specimen was collected during the Aurora mission in 2007

Page 11: Strange Animals of the Ocean

The Dumbo Octopus

• This Grimpoteuthis octopus found over the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, is affectionately called Dumbo because of the way it flaps its ear-like fins to swim.

Page 12: Strange Animals of the Ocean
Page 13: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Viperfish• The Viperfish (Mesopelagic - found at 80-

1600 meters - about a mile down) is one of the most wicked looking sea monsters. Some of them are black as night all over with light organs (called photophores) in strategic places on their bodies, including one on a long dorsal fin that serves as a lure for the fish it preys upon. Some viperfish (and many other deep ocean fish species) don't have any pigment (color) at all - they're transparent. They also have enlarged eyes, presumably for gathering as much light as possible where there is little or no light at all. The light organs of this sea animal create lights by using a chemical process called bioluminescence.

Page 14: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Dragonfish

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Coelacanth

Page 16: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Angler• the angler uses this organ like a lure to

attract its prey. It will flash its light on and off while waving it back and forth like a fishing pole. When the prey fish gets close enough, the angler snaps it up with its powerful jaws. A strange fact about the deep sea angler is the fact that the male is smaller and different in appearance from the female, which is pictures above. The male of the species is about the size of a finger and has small hook teeth, which it uses to attach itself to the female. Once attached, its blood vessels join with that of the female and it will spend the rest of its life joined to her like a parasite, getting all of its nourishment from her body.

Page 17: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Gulper Eel

Page 18: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Giant Isopod

• Giant isopods are known to reach a size of over 16 inches in length

Page 19: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Long-nosed Chimaera• Biologists have gone to great

lengths to describe the long-nosed chimaera, Harriotta raleighana, whose kind can reach five feet in length. In South Africa, it is known as the "ghost shark," though it is only distantly related to sharks. A touch of the venomous spine on the first dorsal fin can kill a person, though such a fate is unlikely given the 8,000-foot depths at which this creature lives.

Page 20: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Colossal Squid

Page 21: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Ocean Sunfish

Page 22: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Oarfish

Page 23: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Megamouth Shark

Page 24: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Fangtooths, also known as ogrefishes

Page 25: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Sea Robbins

Page 26: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Handfish

Page 27: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Goblin Shark

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HatchetFish

Page 29: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Piglet Squid

• This cute little guy swims upside-down, making its tentacles appear to be growing out its head, and making its head look like a chubby, limbless body.

Page 30: Strange Animals of the Ocean

Barreleye Fish

• You know how most fish can’t move their eyes very far? The Barreleye Fish can move it’s eyes around inside its head in any direction it wants. Since the fish’s head is transparent, it can look straight through it’s own head.

Page 31: Strange Animals of the Ocean

The Psychedelic Frogfish

Page 32: Strange Animals of the Ocean

BLOBFISH!