so the yeti crab’s unique feeding habits could be an example of deep-sea adaptations. Next up is a crustacean that is known for ripping through coconut husks with ease, climbing trees at ...
Giant isopods look like monstrously sized woodlice and can live in the deep sea, beyond the reach of daylight. But how much do we really know about the lives of these crustaceans? Despite their ...
The carnivorous harp sponge uses velcro-like hooks on its branching limbs to snare tiny crustaceans, which it then digests ...
These massive crustaceans are thought to live to 100 ... Look, here comes a blobfish! This thrilling deep-sea fish was voted the world's ugliest animal by the Ugly Animal Preservation Society.
The fangtooth fish hunts small crustaceans, cephalopods and other deep-sea fishes by opening its mouth and sucking in, like a deep-sea vacuum. "They seem to eat anything that will fit in their ...
First discovered in 1879, these distant relatives of woodlice thrive in the cold, dark depths of the ocean, scavenging for food on the seafloor ...
Its flexible neck allows it to bend its head back and stick out the lower jaw to reach out and grab fish, squid and crustaceans. This is the only fish that produces red bioluminescence Many deep-sea ...
Crabs, shrimps, lobsters, barnacles, slaters and other crustaceans are the stars of a new miniature exhibition presented by ...