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Photo taken in Red Sea.
Juvenile sharpear enope squid about 1\
Narwhal whales live in social groups called pods and live in the Arctic ocean and males have a tusk.
Munida quadrispina is a species of squat lobster. The claws, chelipeds, are exceptionally long. There are small spines on the chelipeds. Monterey Bay, California.
A 3-D computer illustration of Eurypterid, more commonly known as a Sea Scorpion, from the mid Ordovician to late Permian (460 to 248 million years ago). Eurypterids (sea scorpions) are an extinct group of arthropods that are related to arachnids and include the largest known arthropods to have ever lived. They went extinct during the Permian–Triassic extinction event 252.17 million years ago. Their fossils have a near global distribution. Though purely an artistic interpretation, the structure of the animal is inferred through fossil images and scientific notation of what the species may have looked like within the environment in which they existed.
Red skunk cleaner shrimp
dark deep sea fish isolated on the black background
Seahorse in the water at a night dive. Incredible colors. Surreal. The sea horse is like a chameleon but in the sea, it blends in with the environment and can change color when it needs.
Callipogon armillatus isolated on white background
Sea life  shrimp  Aquatic organism Underwater  Mediterranean sea Scuba diver point of view. Other name: Scampi, Nephrops norvegicus, Nephropidae shrimp-lobster, Norway lobster, Ĺ kamp.
Ribbonfish Deep Sea Underwater Creature from Outer Space during Blackwater diving at Izu, Japan
Lysmata amboinensis is an omnivorous shrimp species known by several common names including the Pacific cleaner shrimp. It is considered a cleaner shrimp as eating parasites and dead tissue from fish makes up a large part of its diet. Indo-Pacific Ocean.
An illustration of a Trilobite moving about on a Cambrian Period (400 million years ago) sea bottom. Trilobites are a well-known fossil group of extinct marine arthropods that form the class Trilobita.
Blue-spot Mantis Haptosquilla stoliura occurs in the tropical Indo-West Pacific in shallow coastal or nearshore reefs in tidal pools and among hard coral fragments in the intertidal area. The iridescent blue patch on the first maxillipeds is distinctive. The max. length of this species seems to be incertain. Some indicate 6.5cm as max. length, others 11.5cm. The length of this specimen is probably 10cm. \nThe ability of Mantis species to see circularly polarised light has led to studies to determine if the mechanisms by which their eyes operate can be replicated for use in reading optical information storage devices. \nTriton Bay, West Papua Province, Indonesia, \n3°54'41.05 S 134°7'18.205 E at 15m depth
Cuttlefish. Detachment of mollusks from the cephalopod class. Lives mainly in the warm seas, close to the coast.\
Cleaner Shrimp Lysmata amboinensis
3D  rendering of a semi-aquatic mammal native to eastern Australia platypus isolated on white background
Stream crab from Sichuan province of China
When you look into the rocky area in the sea, you will always be greeted by shrimps.
A Monaco shrimp (Lysmata seticaudata) on the head of a Mediterranean moray (Muraena helena) in La Ciotat (south of France)
An illustration of the extinct eurypterid Kokomopterus scavenging a dead trilobite on a Silurian seafloor 418 million years ago.
pachycondyla rufipes
Eye of a common octopus
Spot prawn, Pandalus platyceros, perched on algae covered rock.
sea lion isolated on a white background
Munida quadrispina is a species of squat lobster. The claws, chelipeds, are exceptionally long. There are small spines on the chelipeds. Monterey Bay, California.
Gyrodactylus aquatic parasite on the skin of a salmon close-up view
Polydrusus formosus Green Immigrant Leaf Weevil Beetle Insect. Digitally Enhanced Photograph.
An illustration of eurypterids, also known as sea scorpions, traveling together in search of prey. Eurypterids are related to arachnids and include the largest known arthropods to have ever lived. They were formidable predators that thrived in warm shallow water, in both seas and lakes, from the mid Ordovician to late Permian (460 to 248 million years ago).
Close-up shot of Unrecognizable Diver Catching Octopus
Free Images: "bestof:Caelorinchus kermadecus (Kermadec rattail).gif Coelorinchus kermadecus Kermadec rattail Graham Bould Drawings by Dr Tony Ayling Coelorinchus kermadecus"
Caelorinchus kermadecus (Kermadec rattail).gif
Caelorinchus australis (Javelin).gif
Caelorinchus kaiyomaru (Campbell whiptail).gif
Caelorinchus innotabilis (Notable whiptail).gif
Caelorinchus matamua (Mahia whiptail).gif
Coelorinchus fasciatus (Banded whiptail).gif
Bathygadus cottoides (Codheaded rattail).gif
Coryphaenoides rudis (Rudis rattail).gif
Gadomus aoteanus (Filamentous rattail).gif
Trachyrincus longirostris (Slender unicorn rattail).gif
Macrourus carinatus (Ridge scaled rattail).gif
Ruvettus pretiosus (oilfish).png
Lepidorhynchus denticulatus (Thorntooth grenadier).gif
Coryphaenoides serrulatus (Serrulate whiptail).gif
Coryphaenoides subserrulatus (Longrayed whiptail).gif
Nezumia toi (no common name).gif
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