This is a cocunut octopus! They Hide in shells and cocunuts to keep safe!
This is a Gaint Siphonophore! It is actually a bunch of micro organisms that form together to make a really long string of them!
Whatever this is, it seems to have more eyeballs than are strictly necessary. Doto greenamyeri is a nudibranch sea slug, only described in 2015.
The Bobbit worm is a fearsome marine predator that burrows into the sand and waits for unsuspecting prey.
These see-through sea cucumbers snuffle across the seafloor to find tasty morsels in the mud.
this creature resembles something dreamed up by Jim Henson’s studio. But this magnificent marine worm is real enough, and lives happily on deep-sea hydrothermal vents in the Atlantic
This shark is a rare creature of the deep-sea, I'm not going to say much about it because we don't know much about it!
The telescope fish are slender, slightly tapered fish with large heads dominated by large, forward-pointing, telescoping eyes with large lenses.
Sea cucumbers have a leathery skin and an elongated body containing a single, branched gonad; they are named for their overall resemblance to the fruit of the cucumber plant.
The mantis shrimp's second pair of thoracic appendages is adapted for powerful close-range combat.
Frogfishes are small, short and stocky, and sometimes covered in spinules and other appendages to aid in camouflage. The camouflage aids in protection from predators and enables them to lure prey. Many species can change colour; some are covered with other organisms, such as algae or hydrozoa. In keeping with this camouflage, frogfishes typically move slowly, lying in wait for prey, and then striking extremely rapidly, in as little as 6 milliseconds.
Lizardfishes are benthic animals that live in shallow coastal waters; even the deepest-dwelling species of lizardfish live in waters no more than 400 m (1,300 ft) deep. Some species in the subfamily Harpadontinae live in brackish estuaries. They prefer sandy environments, and typically have body colours that help to camouflage them in such environments.
Theese deep-sea fish have a light on their heads to lure their pray to eat them.
Hagfish can exude copious quantities of a milky and fibrous slime or mucus, from specialized slime glands.[6] When released in seawater, the slime expands to 10,000 times its original size in 0.4 seconds.[13] This slime that hagfish excrete has very thin fibers that make it more durable and retentive than the slime excreted by other animals.
The scalop is a sort of clam that can move fairly quickly and have many eyes.
The cuttle fish is a unique kind of mollusk that can cange apearance so quickly that it can hypnotise it's prey!