Esther's photos with the keyword: Aquarium
Goldentail Moray Eel (Explored)
Giant Pacific Octopus
Spread out
Moon Jellies
Balancing Act
Pencil sea urchin
Crustaceans galore
Lemon Shark
05 Oct 2013 |
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Lemon shark - Curaçao Seaquarium
Lemon sharks grow to between 8 and 10 feet long on average and weigh up to 200 pounds.
AIMG 9098
Play time
Diving down
13 Sep 2013 |
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Sawfish - Sydney Aquarium
"The sawfish's most distinctive feature is the saw-like rostrum. The rostrum is covered with electrosensitive pores that allow the sawfish to detect slight movements of prey hiding in the muddy sea floor. The rostrum also serves as a digging tool to unearth buried crustaceans. Should suitable prey try to swim past, the normally lethargic sawfish springs from the bottom and slashes at it with its saw. This generally stuns or impales the prey sufficiently for the sawfish to devour it. Sawfish also defend themselves with their rostrum against intruding divers and predators such as sharks. The "teeth" protruding from the rostrum are not real teeth, but modified tooth-like structures called denticles."
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sawfish
AIMG 8162
Zebra Shark
13 Sep 2013 |
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Zebra shark - Sydney Aquarium
Juvenile zebra sharks have stripes. As they age, they become spotted.
AIMG 8169
Feeding time
Anemone
Smile for the camera
10 Sep 2013 |
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Sawfish - Sydney Aquarium
"The sawfish's most distinctive feature is the saw-like rostrum. The rostrum is covered with electrosensitive pores that allow the sawfish to detect slight movements of prey hiding in the muddy sea floor. The rostrum also serves as a digging tool to unearth buried crustaceans. Should suitable prey try to swim past, the normally lethargic sawfish springs from the bottom and slashes at it with its saw. This generally stuns or impales the prey sufficiently for the sawfish to devour it. Sawfish also defend themselves with their rostrum against intruding divers and predators such as sharks. The "teeth" protruding from the rostrum are not real teeth, but modified tooth-like structures called denticles."
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sawfish
AIMG 8151
Passing through
Shark
Magenta? It must be the lighting
Sawfish
23 Oct 2012 |
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The sawfish's saw is actually an elongation of their head lined with teeth. It contains thousands of ampullary pores which the sawfish uses to detect minute electric fields which surround its prey. The saw is used to find food by digging in the ocean's bottom and by slashing free-swimming fish.
The Melbourne Aquarium in Melbourne, Australia has a marvelous collection of Southern Ocean and Antarctic species, as well as a large variety of sharks and rays.
AIMG_5862
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