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Just one yellowfin tuna
can weigh up to 882 lb
(400 kg), although
388 lb (176 kg) is
more common.
Common bottlenose dolphin
The bottlenose is very smart. It loves to
play, riding in the wakes of boats and
ships. Some have even been known to
help fishermen by driving fish into their
nets in return for some of the catch!
Common sea urchin
The common sea urchin moves along
the ocean floor using “tube feet”—
suckerlike tips that stick out from
its spines. It eats seaweed, mollusks,
corals, and anemones.
Sardines
This fish grows up to 16^1 ⁄ 2 ft
(5 m) long. Sturgeons are
endangered, because people
kill them for their eggs, which
are eaten as caviar.
Beluga sturgeon
With its big forehead
and short beak, this
dolphin looks more like a
small whale. Each baby,
or calf, is born about
3 ft (1 m) long.
Irrawaddy
dolphin
Found in warm
ocean waters, green
sea turtles have
green-colored fat—
that’s what gives
them their name.
Green
turtle
Sperm whales can dive
9,501 ft (2,896 m) deep in
search of octopus, fish,
and giant squid to eat.
They can hold their breath
for up to 90 minutes!
Sperm whale
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Blue mussels
The whale shark isn’t a whale,
but a whale-sized fish. It grows
to about 39^1 ⁄ 2 ft (12 m) long,
and it eats mostly plankton.
Whale
shark
If threatened by a predator,
the porcupine fish “puffs
up” by swallowing air or
water. This makes it a very
uncomfortable mouthful.
Porcupine fish
This crab’s legs never stop
growing. They can stretch
13 ft (4 m) from the tip of
one claw to the other!
Japanese
spider crab
The giant Pacific octopus
grows up to 29^1 ⁄ 2 ft (9 m)
long. The female lays up to
100,000 eggs at a time.
Giant Pacific
octopus
Seawater is full of tiny plants
and animals that are often
too small to see without a
microscope. This is plankton.
Most food chains in the ocean
start with these miniature
life forms.
Plankton
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