The larger the island of knowledge, the longer the shoreline of wonder. - Ralph W. Sockman
There is so much in the deep sea that we are unaware of. Here are some trivia, fun facts on the creatures of the sea, courtesy of Facebook pages ‘Strangest Facts’, ‘Wild Wonders’, ‘All About Animals’, etc… However, I do not know if they are true. Some of them sound really incredible.
This tiny cephalopod lives in shallow sandy reefs across the Indo-Pacific. Despite its name, the Striped Pyjama Squid is actually closer to cuttlefish than true squid. Its bold brown stripes help camouflage it against sand and coral shadows. At night it hunts small shrimp and crustaceans. When threatened, it can release ink and quickly bury itself in the sand to hide. Its large eyes help it see clearly in low light. - A Facebook post by ‘All About Animals’ Delicate looking, endlessly hungry. A seahorse survives on a digestive system that never pauses. But the detail most people miss is what that actually means for its daily life.
Seahorses are one of the few animals on Earth that live without a stomach. Food slides straight from their narrow snout into a short intestine, moving through so quickly that much of the energy barely stays in the body. Nothing is stored. Everything must be replaced. That is why a seahorse hunts almost constantly.
Anchored to seagrass with its curled tail, it waits in the current like a tiny ambush hunter. When a drifting copepod or shrimp passes too close, the snout snaps forward and the prey vanishes in a fraction of a second.
The process repeats again and again, sometimes thousands of times a day. From the outside, they look slow and ornamental, floating gently through quiet water. Up close, their world is a steady rhythm of watch, strike, swallow, repeat.
Fragile is an illusion. A seahorse survives by turning every passing speck of life into fuel before the current carries it away. – A Facebook Post by ‘Strangest Facts’
The tongue‑eating louse is the only parasite on Earth that doesn't just destroy an organ — it BECOMES the organ. The female louse enters a fish through its gills, latches onto the tongue, and begins to suck blood from the organ using three pairs of front claws. Over time, this blood loss causes the tongue to atrophy, wither, and eventually drop off. The fish is now missing a vital part of its mouth.Once the tongue is gone, the louse attaches itself to the remaining stub using its powerful legs. It physically replaces the lost organ, and the fish begins to use the parasite as if it were its own tongue — to manipulate prey and swallow food. It’s the only known case of a parasite functionally replacing a host organ.
The fish gets a working “tongue.” The louse gets a steady supply of blood and mucus, and also shares the meal every time the fish eats, snatching floating food particles. This horrifying relationship can last for the fish's entire life.
The creature hit the headlines in 2005 when a horrified shopper found one inside a red‑snapper fillet bought from a London supermarket. It normally lives off the Gulf of California, leading scientists to wonder if the parasite is expanding its range.
Adult Cymothoa exigua is a parasitic isopod, a relative of woodlice, measuring only 3–4 cm (1.2–1.6 inches). Yet this small crustacean pulls off one of the most bizarre life‑history strategies in the animal kingdom — turning its victim into a mobile home and feeding platform in one fell swoop. – A Facebook Post by ‘Wild Wonders’
The pigbutt worm is one of the strangest, most bizarre creatures in the deep sea — and it’s been hiding off the coast of California the whole time.The pigbutt worm lives between 2,700 and 7,200 feet (820–2,200 meters) below the surface – in the ocean’s “midnight zone,” where sunlight never reaches. It’s neutrally buoyant, meaning it drifts motionless in the dark, with its mouth facing downward, waiting for food to drift into it.
Its scientific name, Chaetopterus pugaporcinus, comes from Latin roots meaning “resembling a pig’s rear.” Scientists gave it that name because it looks exactly like a tiny, disembodied pig butt. It also looks like “Mick Jagger’s lips from the other side,” according to one of the researchers who discovered it.
When threatened, the pigbutt worm performs a magical disappearing act. It releases very small bioluminescent green particles into its mucous cloud, creating a glowing decoy that lingers for 1–2 seconds before fading away. While predators attack the glowing cloud, the worm drifts off unseen in the dark. It also flashes blue light when physically disturbed.
To eat, the worm “casts out a web of snot” to catch organic debris raining down from above – dead animals, fecal pellets, and other particles collectively known as marine snow. It’s a 3D snot web, floating in total darkness.
Discovered in 2007 by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI), the pigbutt worm is a biological mystery. It displays a strange mix of larval and adult characteristics, leading scientists to believe it may be in the middle of an evolutionary leap – neither fully larva nor fully adult, but something in between. – A Facebook Post by ‘Wild Wonders’
Meet the Flowerhorn cichlid – a fish that doesn't exist in nature, can cost more than a house, and has a personality as big as its bulbous head.Flowerhorns don't exist in the wild. They are entirely man‑made, created in Malaysia and Taiwan in the mid‑1990s by crossbreeding several Central American cichlid species, including the red devil cichlid and the blood parrot cichlid. The exact genetic recipe is a closely guarded secret, making each lineage a unique "designer" creation. Biologists call them a "genetic abomination" – a mishmash of species that would never meet in nature.
That massive forehead isn't a tumor – it's a nuchal hump called a "kok," a fat‑filled protuberance involved in mate attraction. The bigger the kok, the more valuable the fish. In 2009, a Golden Monkey variety sold for an eye‑watering $600,000 at a Malaysian exhibition – more than most luxury cars. The fish's hump resembles the Chinese god of longevity, and owners believe that as the hump grows, so does their fortune.
Flowerhorns are notoriously aggressive and highly territorial. They will fight any fish that enters their space – including their own reflection. They lock lips, butt heads, and will relentlessly attack until one fish is dead. They are so aggressive that even large, "mean" fish like oscars are no match for a determined Flowerhorn. This is a fish that should always be kept alone. A living rage machine in a glass box.
Flowerhorns are surprisingly intelligent. They can learn tricks, respond to their name, and most notably, recognize their owners. They will often swim to the front of the tank when their owner approaches, following fingers along the glass or even "begging" for food. Some owners report their Flowerhorn will flare its fins or perform a little dance as a greeting. It's a thinking, feeling creature inside that aggressive, bulbous body.
Flowerhorn markings aren't just decorative – some owners believe the black "flowers" along their sides can form numbers that predict winning lottery digits. One woman reportedly won $1 million after reading the numbers from her fish's markings. This superstition has fueled a multi‑million dollar industry where breeders selectively breed for specific patterns and colors. – A Facebook Post by ‘Wild Wonders’
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