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Swimming sea cucumber, enypniastes

Swimming sea cucumber, enypniastes
Swimming sea cucumber, enypniastes
Swimming sea cucumber, enypniastes
Swimming sea cucumber, enypniastes
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333986
Madin, Laurence P.
Swimming sea cucumber, enypniastes
Still Image
04/18/2006
EnypniastesISSP.tif
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 47, No. 2, inside front cover:
This pink, transparent sea cucumber, an animal related to sea stars and sea urchins, consumes food on the seafloor, then uses the wing-like collar around the front of its body to “fly” up from the bottom. This one’s full gut indicates that it has had a recent meal. Scientists discovered several new species on an expedition to the Celebes Sea.
Image of The Day caption:
Beautiful, ugly, or just plain peculiar according to individual reactions, this pink see-through fantasia is a swimming sea cucumber seen about 2,500 meters deep in the Celebes Sea. In 2007 WHOI biologist Larry Madin led a team of scientists and photographers from the U.S. and the Philippines on an expedition to explore biodiversity in the deep Celebes Sea, supported by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the National Geographic Society, and the WHOI Ocean Life Institute. The team used scuba diving, nets, cameras, and ROVs to study the deep sea in this area that has been called a "cradle of biodiversity for shallow water marine animals."
Photo by Laurence Madin
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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