Creatures
Creatures
Creatures
PREDATORS
EN VI R ON MEN
HAB ITATS TF
OR PLAN
TS AND ANIMALS
Creatures
of the Deep
Copyright 2010 Top That! Publishing plc Tide Mill Way, Woodbridge, Suffolk, IP12 1AP, UK www.topthatpublishing.com Top That! is a trademark of Top That! Publishing plc All rights reserved
CONTENTS
The Ocean and the World Pages 45 Living in the Ocean Pages 68 The Sunlight Zone Pages 911 The Twilight Zone Pages 1213
CONTENTS
Ocean Gliders Pages 3435 Spineless Genius Pages 3638 Cold-Blooded Killers Pages 3941 The Big Ones Pages 4244
The megalodon shark grew up to 20 m (65 ft) long thats as long as 6 cars!
The single landmass, Pangaea, split into the continents we know today
These creatures, in turn, become food for fish. Big fish eat smaller fish. At the top of the food chain are fishermen, large predatory fish such as sharks, together with mammals such as sealions, as well as some species of seabirds
Phytoplankton are eaten by small creatures called zooplankton which, in turn, are eaten by tiny animals such as crabs, jellyfish, corals and worms
FACT BYTES
The oceans provide 99% of the space available for life on Earth!
An ocean-dwelling bird
0m 0 ft
Flying fish
A diver in a wetsuit
50 m
A swordfish
Dolphins
75 m
200 ft
100 m
125 m
A manta ray
150 m 500 ft
A blue whale
175 m
600 ft
11
12
200 m
656 ft
A hatchet fish
300 m 1,000 ft
A submarine
400 m
1,500 ft
A slackjaw
500 m
A lantern fish
600 m 2,000 ft
700 m
A black devil
800 m
2,500 ft
900 m 3,000 ft
1,000 m
3,300 ft
A viperfish
14
1,000 m
3,300 ft
4,000 ft
A Sloanes viperfish
5,000 ft
6,000 ft
2,000 m
7,000 ft
8,000 ft
A pelican eel
2,500 m
9,000 ft
11,000 ft
3,500 m
A ghost shark
12,000 ft
An angler fish
4,000 m
13,000 ft
FACT BYTES
Enormous sea spiders with 30 cm (11 in.) legs can be found scuttling along the sea floor.
16
4,000 m
13,000 ft
4,500 m
15,000 ft
A sea cucumber
16,000 ft
5,000 m
Bacteria
17,000 ft
5,500 m
18,000 ft
A tripod fish
19,000 ft
6,000 m
19,680 ft
FACT BYTES
The Challenger Deep is named after the ship that made the first recordings of its depth, during its 18721876 expedition. This really is the final frontier: scientists know much more about outer space than they do about deep-sea trenches.
18
6,000 m
19,680 ft 20,000 ft
The Mariana Trench is deeper than the tallest buildings and mountains on Earth
22,000 ft
7,000 m
24,000 ft
26,000 ft
8,000 m
28,000 ft
9,000 m
30,000 ft
32,000 ft
10,000 m
34,000 ft
11,033 m
36,198 ft
Starfish, tubeworms, clams and mussels can live at these great depths
Whats a tubeworm
Tubeworms are very basic organisms but can be bigger than a human. They are up to 3 m (8 ft) long and live in tubes attached to rocks. They have very simple bodies, without eyes, mouths, intestines or stomachs. They are hosts to the bacteria that turn volcanic gases into sea food. Scientists believe that tubeworms can live for up to hundreds of years.
A tubeworm
20
LIVING IN PARADISE
In the warm, tropical waters off the coasts of Africa, India and Australia are some of the richest habitats in the seas: coral reefs that pulse and teem with colourful life.
A volcanic island
An atoll
21
A puffer fish
Parrotfish
FACT BYTES
Conchs are a group of molluscs with shells. The queen conch has a beautiful spiral shell thats lined in pink and up to 30 cm (1 ft) long. It is made from sea water minerals.
A sea snake
Clownfish
OCEAN OF ICE
The Arctic may look like a cold, white desert, but under and on top of the ice theres a huge amount of sea life, from orcas to furry seals.
Seals
A walrus Orcas
Polar bears
A blue shark
1.2 m/ 4 ft
3.8 m/13 ft
6 m/20 ft
A basking shark
12.2 m/40 ft
FACT BYTES
In the 16th century, a knight in full armour was found in a sharks stomach!
27
28
29
FACT BYTES
Whales sing to each other underwater. These songs can travel for miles. Different whale pods sing very different songs. Whales with teeth also emit clicking sounds to detect prey. The sound waves bounce off the prey and return to the whale, who then knows exactly where the next meal is.
Tiny shrimp, called krill, are eaten by some species of whale A whale uses its filters (baleen) to sieve the water for food
FACT BYTES
What is breaching
Whales like to jump out of the water and bellyflop back down, known as breaching. They also like to stick their tails out of the sea and slap the water very hard. Many reasons have been suggested by scientists for this behaviour, from making noise to scare prey to dominance, courting and warning in a group.
After diving, whales clear the blowholes which take air to their lungs shooting a water spout 15 m (50 ft) into the air the same as the height of 8 people end to end.
FACT BYTES
Dolphins can often be seen surfing the waves produced by boats. Dusky dolphins are so good at this that they can reach speeds of 56 km/h (35 mph), jump 6 m (20 ft) in the air and turn somersaults while surfing. This may help them catch fish but its also fun!
FACT BYTES
Just like whales, dolphins make noises called clicks. They are produced by the dolphins forehead and are actually two sound beams. These beams rebound off underwater objects and are transmitted to the dolphins brain where they create a detailed picture of the object. Dolphins also use clicks to stun prey.
OCEAN GLIDERS
Rays are amazingly graceful flat fish that glide over reefs and the sea floor. They are related to sharks and are found in all oceans, often in very large groups.
FACT BYTES
Manta rays are curious and like to swim with humans they especially like the bubbles from scuba-diving equipment and will also pop up near boats.
34
An electric ray
35
SPINELESS GENIUS
They writhe and wriggle through the ocean, but squid and octopuses are really clever when it comes to staying out of trouble.
FACT BYTES
Some squid can jump 12 m (40 ft) out of the water to escape predators. Each octopus tentacle has 240 suction cups on it for grip.
36
An octopus
A squid
An octopus beak
FACT BYTES
Octopuses live in caves and are very house proud: they use their siphons to squirt debris out of their homes after they have eaten.
COLD-BLOODED KILLERS
Speed, power, adaptability, sharp senses and sharper teeth these are what make a perfect predator. In the sea, where most creatures are cold-blooded, size really doesnt count.
FACT BYTES
The viperfish (below) impales prey on its oversized fangs after slamming into it at high speeds.
A nudibranch
A jellyfish
A sea anemone
39
A bull shark
A mantis shrimp
FACT BYTES
The 2.4 m (8 ft) wolf-eel (below) has extremely strong jaws perfect for crushing crabs.
A hammerhead shark
A great barracuda
41
FACT BYTES
Weight: 2057 tonnes Length: 1120 m (3665 ft) Food: The sperm whale mainly eats squid and octopus, but also fish and sometimes giant squid. Fact: It is the largest living animal with teeth.
FACT BYTES
Weight: 100160 tonnes Length: Up to 32.9 m (108 ft) Food: It consumes more than 6 tonnes of small crustaceans (krill) a day. Fact: It is the largest animal ever to have existed.
FACT BYTES
Weight: Up to 800 kg (1,770 lb) Length: 1.31.8 m (46 ft) Food: They feed primarily on jellyfish. Fact: Leatherback turtles lay their eggs on beaches.
A walrus
A leatherback turtle
FACT BYTES
Weight: 1.22 tonnes Length: 33.6 m (1012 ft) Food: It feeds mainly on worms, shellfish, sea-snails and shrimp. Fact: The male walrus is twice the weight of the female.
A basking shark
FACT BYTES
Weight: Up to 6 tonnes Length: 1015 m (3349 ft) Food: The basking shark uses a filter to consume as much plankton as it can. Fact: It is the worlds second largest fish.
FACT BYTES
A full-grown blue whale can gulp 50 tonnes of water in one go. The giant squid has the largest eyes in the animal kingdom.
44
BRINGING UP BABY
Sea mammals are the only sea creatures that look after their young, but the rest have ingenious ways of protecting their eggs.
FACT BYTES
The female octopus stays with her eggs until they hatch
Basking sharks are pregnant for 3.5 years and have the largest shark pups 1.6 m (5.5 ft).
FACT BYTES
The eggs of small sea creatures hatch as tiny larva and drift with the ocean currents. They are called plankton. Whale and dolphin calves are a mottled colour to camouflage them from predators.
46
FACT BYTES
The colourful lionfish has stunning fins and spines. On the coral reef, however, its the ultimate bully pushing smaller fish into corners before stinging them to death.
A box jellyfish
Only the size of a golf ball, the blue-ringed octopus is lethal to humans
Can Ishould understand parrot Why you be careful picking up shells behaviour
Cone snails live in beautiful coloured shells you might like the look of one and pick it up to take home. The snail inside the shell, however, has teeth that are sharper than harpoons. These teeth can penetrate clothing and their venom can paralyse breathing and then kill.
A cone shell
FACT BYTES
The sting from a sea wasp jellyfish could kill 60 adults.
Scientists trawl up marine animal specimens in trawler nets. They also use cameras on remote control vehicles to get pictures of deep-ocean creatures. Scientists can even go to the depths themselves in submarines called submersibles. These machines have robotic arms and special equipment to bring live specimens to the surface.
50
FACT BYTES
The study of animals and plants that live in the ocean is called marine biology.
Studying ocean life can tell us much about the state of our planet
FACT BYTES
Early deep-sea machines called diving bells were simple spheres of solid steel, built to withstand extreme water pressure.
51
Marine biologists study ocean life Remote control vehicles help us to explore the ocean
Tonnes 75
50
25
53
FACT BYTES
The first marine parks are now open. These protect specific ocean environments from fishing and other industries.
The ocean is a wonderful resource, but humans must take greater care of it. Man-made pollution could lead to the death of many of the oceans creatures
ENDANGERED SPECIES
When the members of an animal species die faster than they reproduce, the species can become extinct. Humans are making this happen all the time how can we stop this from happening?
FACT BYTES
All species of sea turtles are listed as threatened or endangered. This is partly due to accidental fishing and a demand for tortoiseshell.
A trapped dolphin
56
A sea otter
A spotted dolphin
A grey whale
A sea turtle
A manatee
A dugong
What is a coelacanth
The coelacanth (below) is a 380-million year old fish, and was thought to have become extinct with the dinosaurs but then turned up in the Indian Ocean!
FACT BYTES
Grey whales were called devilfish by whalers because they fought so ferociously for their lives. They have a layer of blubber up to 25 cm (10 in.) thick.
The coelacanth turned up in the Indian Ocean, after it was believed to be extinct
58
FISHY FACTS
You might find some of these fantastic fishy facts hard to believe but they are all absolutely true!
FACT BYTES
The shell of the chambered nautilus has a beautiful and mathematically perfect pattern on it. The pattern is called a logarithmic spiral.
A bluefin tuna
88 km/h
110 km/h
120 km/h
A swordfish
A porcupine fish
60
GLOSSARY
Abyssopelagic The 4,000 to 6,000 m depth zone of the ocean. Ambergris A pale grey, waxy substance with a strong smell produced in the intestines of sperm whales, found in lumps floating on the water or washed ashore. Ampullae The ampullae of Lorenzini are electroreceptive organs positioned in the head of a shark. These electrical field sensing devices are jelly-filled pores which enable a shark to detect the presence of another living creature even if all its other senses are deactivated. Atoll A ring-shaped coral reef surrounding a lagoon. Coastal shelf The part of a landmass that is under the water. Coelacanth The 400 million-year-old fossil fish which predates the dinosaurs; and is the closest link between fish and the first amphibian creatures which made the transition from sea to land in the Devonian period. It was first discovered in 1938. Diving bell A large, hollow, bottomless, underwater container pumped full of air, to which an unequipped diver returns to take in oxygen. Dugong A grey-brown, whale-like, plant-eating tropical sea mammal that lives for up to 50 years and grows up to 3 m in length. Epipelagic zone The 0 to 200 m depth zone of the ocean. Food chain A sequence of organisms arranged in such a way that each feeds on the organism below it in the chain, and serves as a source of food for the organism above it. Gravitational pull This is what causes waves and tides, because as the Moon moves around Earth it pulls water upwards on the near side of Earth and downwards on the far side; but the downforce is weaker. Hadalpelagic zone The 6,000 m plus depth zone of the ocean. Invertebrates Any animal lacking a backbone. Krill A tiny, shrimp-like shellfish or crustacean, around 15 to 30 mm long, that is eaten by whales. Krill is a Norwegian word, meaning whale food. Logarithmic spiral As in the nautilus snail where each new chamber of its shell is a fixed percentage larger than the previous one.
62
GLOSSARY
Mariana Trench This is located in the Pacific Ocean not far from Japan. It is the deepest part of Earths oceans and the deepest location of Earth itself. Its deepest point is called the Challenger Deep. Mesopalagic zone The 200 to 1,000 m depth zone of the ocean. Narwhal An Arctic whale; the male has a long, spiral tusk. Nudibranch Also known as sea slugs because they are like snails without shells. Many are brightly coloured, others are more subtly coloured and therefore easily camouflaged. They are some of the most beautiful creatures in the ocean and there are some 3,000 different species. Pangaea The name given to the hypothetical supercontinent that is thought to have represented the entire landmass of Earth about 200 to 250 million years ago; before it split into separate continents. Panthalassa The ocean that surrounded the surface of Earth hundreds of millions of years ago before it divided into five oceans. Photosynthesis A process whereby green plants manufacture carbohydrates from carbon dioxide and water using the light energy from sunlight trapped by the pigment chlorophyll. Plankton Microscopic animals and plants that float or drift with the current in the surface waters of seas and lakes. Plankton are an important food source for invertebrates, fish and whales and form the basis of all marine food chains. Pod This is the name given to the closely-knit family groups of killer (orca) whales which consist of up to 30 members. They swim together, usually no more than 1 km apart. Primeval Something that belongs to Earths beginnings; in other words, from the earliest age or ages. ROVs Remotely operated vehicles. Submersible A vessel that is able to operate successfully under water. Symbiosis The close association between two organisms of different species, usually to the benefit of both partners. Mostly this relationship is essential for their mutual survival. Trilobite An extinct marine arthropod having a flat, oval body divided lengthwise into three sections. Also, the fossilised remains of this animal. Upwellings Caused by a process in which cold, often nutrient-rich water from the ocean depths rises to the surface.
63
INDEX
abyssopelagic zone 16 algae 4 ambergris 29, 44 ampullae 28 ancient Greeks 61 angelfish 21 anglerfish 1415 Arctic Ocean 5, 2425 Atlantic Ocean 5 atoll 21 bacteria 4, 14, 16, 17, 60 baleen whales 29 barracuda 4041 bathypelagic zone 1415 bears, polar 25 beluga whale 25 bioluminescent light 12, 14, 25 black dragonfish 14, 15 black ink 38 blowholes 31 bluefin tuna 59 box jellyfish 4849 breaching 31 calcium carbonate 5 camouflage 8, 14, 28, 38, 48 canyons 1820 carbon dioxide 4 Challenger Deep 18 chemical clouds 4 chemical particles 4 clams 20 clicks 33 clown fish 22, 23 coelacanth 58 conch 23 cone snails 49 continents 5 coral polyps 22 coral reef 2123, 34 crabs 21, 41 devilfish 58 dolphins 3233, 46, 50, 56, 57 dragonfish 1415 drift nets 33, 54 dugongs 56, 57 eels 12 electric ray 35, 61 endangered species 5658 environmental change 5052 epipelagic (sunlight) zone 911, 12 evaporation 5 extinction 5658 firefly squid 12 flying fish 60 food chain 6, 7 fossilised plankton 60 ghost shark 14, 15 giant squid 14, 38, 42, 44 gills 6 hadalpelagic zone 1820 hatchet fish 12, 13 Indian Ocean 5, 58 invertebrates 16 jellyfish 12, 39, 4849 krill 29, 44 lanternfish 12, 13 lateral line 11 lionfish 48 living laboratory 50 manatees 56, 57 mangrove whipray 34 manta rays 34 Mariana Trench 18, 19 marine biology 51 marine parks 54 marlins 59 megalodons 4 mesopelagic zone 1213 midnight zone 1415 migrate 44 minnows 52 mountain range 61 mussels 20 narwhals 25 Nereus 18 nudibranches 39 octopus 12, 3638, 45, 48 ogrefish 14 orca whales 24, 29 Pacific Ocean 5, 58 Pangaea 5 Panthalassa 5 parrotfish 21 pelican eel 12, 14, 15 photosynthesis 24 plankton 6, 911, 35, 53, 60 plesiosaurs 4 pods 29 pollution 22, 5658 porcupinefish 60 pufferfish 22, 61 queen conch 56 radar 54 rays 3435, 61 reefs 2123, 34 ROVs (remotely operated vehicles) 18, 20, 50, 51 satellite images 50 sea anemones 39 sea cucumbers 17 sea floor 1617, 18, 20, 34, 54 sea otters 56, 57, 58 sea snakes 11, 21, 23 sea spiders 16 sea turtles 10, 11, 21 sea wasps 49 seahorse 47 seals 24, 25 sedimentation 22 sharks 4, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15, 21, 25, 2628, 4041, 43, 44, 45, 47, 51 shellfish 37 shrimp 12 shrimp, mantis 40 slackjaw 13 sperm whale 14, 29, 38, 42, 44 sponges 21 squid 12, 3638, 46 starfish 16 stingrays 35 submarine 13, 51 submersibles 50 swordfish 59 symbiosis 22 trawlers 5052, 54 trenches 1820 trilobites 4 tripodfish 16, 17 tubeworms 20 tuna fish 11, 59 turtles 21, 43, 44, 56, 57 twilight zone 1213 vampire squid 14 vents 20 viperfish 12, 14, 15, 39 volcanoes 20, 21 walruses 2425, 43, 44 whales 4, 7, 911, 25, 2931, 38, 42, 44, 46, 5658 wolf-eels 41
64
How do dolphins talk? Which creatures live in the twilight zone? What is a tubeworm? Why are coral reefs dying? There are 64 pages of bite-size facts, brilliant illustrations and diagrams to tell you loads of things you never knew about the creatures of the deep. No question is too tough to tackle, and no answer too difficult to explain. Focus On titles are the ultimate in addictive reading!
Published by Top That! Publishing plc Copyright 2010 Top That! Publishing plc Tide Mill Way, Woodbridge, Suffolk, IP12 1AP, UK www.topthatpublishing.com Top That! is a registered trademark of Top That! Publishing plc All rights reserved. 0246897531