A for Angel shark
Ah, the angel sharks the holiest creature in the sea. Angel sharks don’t look like most sharks at all. Unlike most sharks, they have long flat bodies, broad pectoral fins, and thick pelvic fins as well. They only weigh around 60 pounds but the most massive angle shark ever found was in Europe it weighed approximately 170 lbs.
Angel sharks are seen all over the worlds in different oceans except for the Indian ocean. They like to hide in the sand in shallow places of the sunlight zone, or the can be observed around 4,356 feet deep. https://animals.howstuffworks.com/fish/sharks/angel-shark3.html
B for Broad could cuttlefish
The broad could cuttlefish is a quirky little creature. They are usually 3 inches long. An extraordinary thing about the cuttlefish is that they can manually change their buoyancy. They have a porous shell in said them called the ‘cuttlebone.’ The cuttlebone helps the adjust the gas in their front chamber and the water in their back chamber, but the process is not very fast.http://mentalfloss.com/article/66759/10-colorful-facts-about-cuttlefish
C for Christmas tree worms
The Chrismas tree worms scientific name is Spirobranchus giganteus. The reason their called Christmas tree worms has long feather-like tentacles protruding from their body, so they look like a little fur tree. They use their feelers to catch food and to help them breathe. They eat phytoplankton and microscopic plants. Ch, are relatively small ranging around 1.5 inches long. These tentacles are brightly colored and very easy to spot the water. Chrismas tree worms burrow into live coral and anchor their bodies in it.
D for Dugong
Dugongs are sirenian animals which are the group of aquatic, herbivorous mammals; Dugongs have a fusiform body with no dorsal fin or hind limbs. Dugongs eat mostly seagrass and live in broad, shallow bays or mangrove channels. Dugongs are very easily distinguishable from manatees because of their fluked tails. They have sharply downturned noses for feeding in benthic seagrass zones.https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/d/dugong/?user.testname=none
E for Elephant seal
Male elephant seals have noses that look like a tiny trunk! The nose begins to develop when they reach three to five years old, and the nose is fully matured when the male is seven to nine years old. Males can weigh up to 4,500 pounds and can grow up to 13ft long. Females don’t grow quite as big only increasing as big as 10 feet in length and weighing 1,500 pounds. Elephant seals are some of the most massive seals in the world. The elephant seal is in the phocid or a member of the true seal family. Elephant seals don’t have outer ear flaps, and they move on land by wobbling on its belly.http://www.marinemammalcenter.org/education/marine-mammal-information/pinnipeds/northern-elephant-seal/
F for Flamingo tongue snail
Flamingo tongue is a small marine snail that lives on coral reefs in the western Atlantic ocean. These snails are very colorful with bright pink or orange coloration and black spots. It’s not their shell that is colorful but their flesh that they wrap around their shell. T