Poromitra crassiceps
Karen Osborne, Smithsonian Institution

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Poromitra crassiceps
Karen Osborne, Smithsonian Institution
Idiacanthus antrostomus
Karen Osborne, Smithsonian Institution
Idiacanthus antrostomus
Karen Osborne, Smithsonian Institution
Idiacanthus antrostomus
Karen Osborne, Smithsonian Institution
Anoplogaster cornuta
Karen Osborne, Smithsonian Institution
Juvenile comb jellies (indicated with red arrows) can be seen inside the auricles of an adult collected from Kiel Fjord in 2008. Jellies use their auricles to help draw in prey.
Jamileh Javidpour
Adult warty comb jellies (Mnemiopsis ledyi) feast on their young after large summer population booms deplete their food, a new study finds. Cannibalism may help the animals last through the winter when there’s little to eat.
Bruno C. Vellutini/Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)
OceanX and Photographer Paul Caiger Showing the Many Faces of the Ocean Twilight Zone.
@oceanx @paulcaiger
Deep Sea Dragonfish
Melanocetidae (Larval female anglerfish)
by Dante Fenolio
(source)
Histioteuthis bonnellii. (Jewel squid)
Credit: David Shale/MAR-ECO, Census of Marine Life
Tomopteris carpenter. (Striped deep sea worm)
Credit: © Hauke Flores, AWI
Phronima
Credit: © David Shale
Neolithodes sp. (Spiny Deepsea King Crab)
Credit: © David Shale
Leachia sp. (Cuckatoo squid)
Credit: Marsh Youngbluth/MAR-ECO, Census of Marine Life