ANGEL, MONSTER
When sea angels hunt, they transform into monsters. The free-swimming slugs, less than an inch long, store six jellylike “arms” known as buccal cones inside their heads (left). When they sense prey—for example, a nearby sea butterfly—muscles in their core contract, causing the arms to shoot out (right) and grab the target, in milliseconds. They can also tear a victim’s body out of its shell for easier consumption. Credit: Alexander Semenov
Fantastic Sea Creatures Photographed Up Close and Personal
Sea angels, telescope fish and blanket octopuses can be real monsters
Joanna Thompson is an insect enthusiast and former Scientific American intern. She is based in New York City. Follow Thompson on Twitter @jojofoshosho0
Reclusive telescopefish live nearly a mile below the ocean’s surface, where they feed on bioluminescent creatures. They orient themselves vertically to pick out the silhouettes of prey swimming overhead, then strike with their nasty jaws. Whenever they ingest a glowing meal, they risk lighting up from within, broadcasting their location to their own predators. To stay hidden in the dark waters, the fish have evolved an opaque stomach that acts like a built-in blackout curtain after they have eaten.
INTIMIDATOR
A female blanket octopus unfurls her iridescent cape. Scientists suspect that the membranous webbing helps to deter would-be predators by making the octopus appear larger and more intimidating. The female can grow to six feet long and up to 40,000 times heavier than the male, which is smaller than a Ping Pong ball—one of the most extreme sex differences in the animal kingdom.
DIVE KINGS
King penguins nest in massive colonies—sometimes with hundreds of thousands of birds—on sub-Antarctic islands. They do not build nests. Instead they keep each egg warm on the top of their feet. The males take the first incubation shift, which can last for weeks, while the females venture to the sea for a well-earned meal. Measuring about three feet tall, the kings are the second-largest of all penguins, eclipsed only by the emperors.
This article was originally published with the title "Fantastic Sea Creatures Photographed Up Close and Personal" in Scientific American 327, 2, (August 2022)