The words you are searching are inside this book. To get more targeted content, please make full-text search by clicking here.

Super Shark Encyclopedia uncovers the secrets of the oceans by exploring a remarkable array of 80 sharks and other sea creatures - from Barrel Shrimp to Blue Sharks, Starfish to Bat Fish, and Hammerhead Sharks to

Sandtiger Sharks, plus surfing penguins, deep-sea monsters, rays, eels and more. Packed with jaw-dropping

facts about animal behavior and anatomy, new x-ray artworks utilize cross-sections and strip layers away to

show key anatomical features in detail. It showcases record-breaking animals, such as the deadliest predators and the most venomous creatures, and explains how and why their bodies work the way they do. With its combination of spectacular photography and clear yet authoritative text, Super Shark Encyclopedia is the ultimate visual guide to the oceans' most incredible stories.

Reviews:

"Super Shark Encyclopedia is the ultimate visual guide to the oceans' most incredible stories." - Midwest


Book Review

"[A]rriving just in time for Shark Week on the Discovery Channel, this encyclopedia can be a great jumping-

off point to keep your child interested long after the television is off. - Colorado Parent

Awards:

An International Literary Association - Children's Book Council Children's Choices List Selection

Discover the best professional documents and content resources in AnyFlip Document Base.
Search
Published by Read My eBook for FREE!, 2020-02-16 04:33:29

(DK) Super Shark Encyclopedia: And Other Creatures of the Deep

Super Shark Encyclopedia uncovers the secrets of the oceans by exploring a remarkable array of 80 sharks and other sea creatures - from Barrel Shrimp to Blue Sharks, Starfish to Bat Fish, and Hammerhead Sharks to

Sandtiger Sharks, plus surfing penguins, deep-sea monsters, rays, eels and more. Packed with jaw-dropping

facts about animal behavior and anatomy, new x-ray artworks utilize cross-sections and strip layers away to

show key anatomical features in detail. It showcases record-breaking animals, such as the deadliest predators and the most venomous creatures, and explains how and why their bodies work the way they do. With its combination of spectacular photography and clear yet authoritative text, Super Shark Encyclopedia is the ultimate visual guide to the oceans' most incredible stories.

Reviews:

"Super Shark Encyclopedia is the ultimate visual guide to the oceans' most incredible stories." - Midwest


Book Review

"[A]rriving just in time for Shark Week on the Discovery Channel, this encyclopedia can be a great jumping-

off point to keep your child interested long after the television is off. - Colorado Parent

Awards:

An International Literary Association - Children's Book Council Children's Choices List Selection

EXPLORING THE DEEP





TAKING OVER
Anemones, barnacles, and sea
urchins are among the first
animals to set up home on a
sunken ship. About a year or
two later, corals start building
up, turning the shipwreck into
an artificial reef.
199

DESCENT INTO



DARKNESS




BOTTOM OF THE SEA






The surface of the ocean is bright with sunshine, wild
with waves and, in the tropics, it is warm. Deeper down,
the Sun’s rays cannot reach: it is always dark and colder
than inside a refrigerator. The deepest part of the ocean
is home to some of the strangest animals on the planet.
There is so little food down there that fish swim slowly
to save their energy. Anything that comes within range
is a potential meal—even if it’s bigger than you are.




GLOWING IN THE DARK
Many deep-sea animals have special light-
producing organs or patches in their skin.
They flash their lights to signal to mates,
or use them as a lure for attracting prey.


Giant tube worms, crabs,
and fish live around hot
water vents on the sea floor



HOT-BED OF LIFE
In places the ocean floor has volcanic
ridges that spew out super-hot water.
The animals here survive the high
temperatures and feed on chemicals
dissolved in the water.





Mouthlike hood
snaps shut when
food drifts inside





UNDER PRESSURE
Some animals, such as this
predatory tunicate, live attached
to the ocean floor. It catches tiny
floating animals in its “jaws” and,
like other deep-sea animals, has
a flabby body that can withstand
200 the high water pressure.

GHOST OF THE DEEP
This ghost shark is happiest in coastal
seas but sometimes descends to
deeper, darker waters where it
spends most of its time swimming
slowly along the bottom looking for
equally slow prey. Its strong sense of
smell and ability to detect electric
fields help it search in the gloom.


























































EXPLORING THE DEEP


















201

EXPLORING THE DEEP HELPING A FRIEND










Manatees are slow-moving mammals that
can be injured by collisions with ships and
other motorboats. They are also harmed by
pollution. Scientists keep a check on their
numbers to see if they need extra protection.
202
202

KEEPING TRACK




PROTECTING THE SEAS






The ocean looks so vast that it seems endless and
everlasting. In fact, many animals are fished so much that
their numbers are dropping. Garbage from land pollutes
the water, while ocean life is harmed by climate changes.
All around the world people are studying the ocean and
doing what they can to protect the animals that live
there and prevent them from being driven to extinction.



Radio tracker fixed
to turtle’s shell


TRACKING MOVEMENTS
By fitting animals with trackers that
send out detectable signals, scientists
can keep track of where they go.
This helps them protect species that
rely on certain habitats to survive.









REPLANTING REEFS
In places where reefs have been
destroyed, special frames are used to
replace them. These have been “seeded”
with fragments of coral, encouraging the
growth of new reefs as habitats for animals.



STATS AND FACTS

NUMBER OF SPECIES DESCRIBED PER YEAR
Scientists are still 136 fish 452 crustaceans 683 other
discovering new types
of marine life. There
could be as many as 379 mollusks Total 1,650
one million species
living in the ocean.
NUMBER OF FISH SPECIES
17,400 species
of marine fish


32,800 total fish species
RECORDED MARINE SPECIES
200,000


203

GLOSSARY














ABYSS COLONY FEEDING FRENZY INVERTEBRATE
The abyss, or abyssal zone, is the A group of animals that live closely When a group of predators, such as An animal without a backbone.
deepest part of the ocean, stretching together, often relying on each other. sharks or sailfish, work together to Includes corals, mollusks, starfish,
13,100 to 19,700 ft (4,000–6,000 m). Corals live in colonies. herd and attack prey, often with few jellyfish, shrimp, and sponges.
It is intensely dark and cold and few of the prey surviving.
animals are able to live there. CORAL JUVENILE
Soft-bodied animals that live in large FEELER A young animal that is not yet able
ALGAE groups or colonies, usually in warm, Part of the body that is used to sense to reproduce.
A group of simple plants that include shallow seas. They secrete a substance or touch things, especially when
microscopic green plankton and that hardens into stone around them searching for food. LARVA
enormous multicelled seaweeds, for protection. A young stage of an animal that looks
such as giant kelp. FILTER FEEDER very different from its adult form. Many
CRUSTACEAN An animal that feeds by filtering out marine animals spend part of their
BELL An animal such as a shrimp, crab, or plankton or small particles of food early life as a larva, including crabs,
The umbrella-shaped body of lobster that has a hard outer shell and suspended in water. corals, and lobsters. (Plural is larvae.)
a jellyfish. four or more pairs of limbs. They have
to molt the outer shell to grow. FLATFISH LURE
BIOLUMINESCENCE A flattened species of fish that swims A part of the body of a marine animal
The production of light by animals. DECIBEL on its side, close to the seabed. Both that is used as bait to attract another
It can be used to attract a mate, for A unit that measures the intensity or eyes lie on the same side of the head. animal when hunting. Lures can
camouflage, as a decoy, for catching loudness of a sound. Total silence is just Members of this group include plaice, resemble a food animal, such as a
prey, or for communication. It is above 0 decibels (dB). soles, and halibut. worm, or be bioluminescent to attract
created by a chemical reaction in prey in darkness.
the animal’s body. DISK WIDTH GAPE
Term used to describe the body size The wide opening of an animal’s MAMMAL
BUOYANCY of a fish, such as a ray, that has “wings.” mouth or shell. A warm-blooded animal that has hair
The ability of a marine organism and feeds its young on milk. Marine
to float in water. DORSAL FIN GESTATION mammals include whales, dolphins,
An unpaired, upright fin on the back The period of time, also called a and seals.
CAMOUFLAGE of a fish, whale, or dolphin. pregnancy, between the fertilization
Colors and patterns on an animal’s of an egg and the birth of an animal. MEMBRANE
skin that help it blend in with ECHINODERM A thin, flexible piece of skinlike tissue
its surroundings. A marine invertebrate that has a chalky GILLS that acts as a barrier.
outer skeleton and tube feet, such as a The structures used by fish and other
CANINE sea star (starfish) or sea urchin. aquatic animals to obtain oxygen MIDNIGHT ZONE
A pointed tooth that is often enlarged from water. Usually arranged in pairs, The cold, dark zone in the middle of
in meat eaters and is used for tearing ELECTRORECEPTION they also get rid of waste carbon the ocean. It generally describes depths
food. In walruses and narwhals the The ability of an aquatic animal to dioxide from the blood. between 3,300–13,100 ft (1,000 and
upper canines grow long enough to detect an electric field or current. 4,000 m) below the surface. Animals
form tusks. It is used for detecting objects or HERTZ that live here have to cope with intense
for communication. A unit (Hz) used to measure the pressure and constant darkness.
CARTILAGE frequency of sound waves. One hertz
A tough, light yet flexible substance EGG CASE is equal to one cycle per second. MIGRATION
that makes up the skeleton of a shark The tough case that surrounds the The higher the frequency of cycles, The regular return journey that an
or ray instead of bone. fertilized egg of some sharks or rays. the higher-pitched the sound. animal makes every year to reach
It protects the developing shark until feeding or breeding grounds.
COLD-BLOODED it is ready to hatch. HYDROTHERMAL VENT
Describes an animal whose body A crack in the seabed that pours out MOLLUSK
temperature varies with that of ESTUARY superheated water that is full of An invertebrate animal that has a soft,
its environment. It controls its The mouth of a large river at the point minerals. Vents are often home to muscular body. Sometimes the body
temperature by moving to hotter where it meets the sea. The amount of unique colonies of animals that can is surrounded by a hard shell. Mollusks
or cooler areas as needed. salt in the water changes with the tide. survive in harsh conditions. include snails, clams, and sea slugs.

204

MOLT REEF SUBMERSIBLE WARM-BLOODED
The process of shedding an outer A ridge of jagged coral, rock, or sand A small underwater craft designed Describes an animal that is able to
layer of skin or an external shell so lying just above or below the surface for research and exploration. keep its body temperature constant
that an animal can grow. This occurs of the sea. regardless of the temperature of its
at certain times of the year or at SUNLIGHT ZONE surroundings. All marine mammals
particular points in the animal’s REPTILE The uppermost layer of the ocean, and some sharks are warm-blooded.
life cycle. A cold-blooded vertebrate with scaly, which is bathed with sunlight during
waterproof skin, such as a marine the day. In clear water it can extend WATER PRESSURE
MOUTHBROODER iguana or a sea snake. down as far as 655 ft (200 m); in The weight of the water pressing
Species of fish in which one of the murky water as little as 50 ft (15 m). down on an animal as it goes deeper
parents holds the developing eggs SALINITY Most fish live in this zone. into the ocean. At the bottom of
in its mouth until they hatch. During The amount of salt dissolved in water. the deepest trench it is as much as
this time the adult cannot feed. Seawater has 35 g of salt for every TENTACLE 8 tons per square inch (1 tonne per
liter of water. Fresh water is usually Thin, flexible limb mainly used for square cm).
NOCTURNAL less than 0.5 g of salt per liter. grasping and feeding. Some carry sense
Describes an animal that is active organs for touch, taste, smell, or VENOM
at night and sleeps during the day. SCAVENGER vision. Others may be equipped with A poison, or toxin, produced by
An animal that feeds on dead plants suckers, stingers, hooks, or even teeth. an animal that is used in hunting
NUTRIENT or animals. or self-defense. It is injected into
A substance that provides vital TIDE another animal through a bite
nourishment needed for the growth SCHOOL OR SHOAL The twice-daily rise and fall in sea or sting.
and maintenance of life. A large number of fish that swim level that is caused by the pull of the
together. Sun and Moon. VERTEBRATE
OCEAN TRENCH An animal that has a backbone or
A very deep canyon in the ocean floor. SENSORY PORE TOXIC spinal column made up of individual
The temperature is barely above Part of a network of jelly-filled Describes a substance that is bones or pieces of cartilage called
freezing and the water pressure is pockets on the skin of sharks and poisonous. The bite or sting of an vertebrae. (Single is vertebra.)
crushing. Few animals can survive here. other electroreceptive fish. These animal may have a toxic effect on
pores help fish detect electric fields. another animal. VERTICAL MIGRATION
PARASITE A pattern of movement of animals
An organism that lives on or inside SKELETON TWILIGHT ZONE (and plankton) between deep and
another animal to gain food or shelter. A framework of bone or cartilage The region immediately below the shallow waters. This may happen
It is usually harmful to its host. that supports the body of an animal sunlight zone, from 655 to 3,300 ft daily or be seasonal. It also occurs
and provides attachment points (200–1,000 m). Very little light reaches in animals that spend different stages
PECTORAL FINS for muscles. this level and plants cannot grow. of their lives at different depths.
A pair of fins that lie either side of
a fish’s head that help control its SKIN PIGMENT
direction of movement. Color found in the skin of an animal.
ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THIS BOOK

PITCH SLIME
The high or low quality of a sound. A soft and slippery substance that is / per—for example, km/h means kilometers per hour
produced by the skin of an animal. It °C degrees Celsius
PLANKTON helps fish swim more easily, but also cal calories
Tiny animals and algae that drift protects them against parasites and cm centimeter
or float in the sea and other water infections. Some slimes are poisonous dB decibel
bodies. They provide food for to predators. °F degrees Fahrenheit
larger animals. fl oz fluid ounce
SPAWN ft foot
PREDATOR The eggs of a fish, amphibian, or g gram
An animal that hunts and kills other invertebrate. Spawning is the laying Hz hertz—see glossary for definition
animals (its prey) for food. of the eggs. in inch
kg kilogram
PREY SPECIES km kilometer
An animal that is killed and eaten A group of animals that look like one lb pound
by a predator. another and can reproduce with each m meter
other—animals cannot reproduce min minute
PROPULSION with members of another species. ml milliliter
The action of moving forward. mm millimeter
STINGER mph miles per hour
RAKER A weapon used by some animals in oz ounce GLOSSARY
A structure in a filter-feeding fish that self-defense or to capture prey by s or sec second
scrapes food particles off the gills and injecting a poison through a hollow sq square
diverts them to the food pipe. spine or harpoon.

205

INDEX













A cleaner wrasse, blue-streak 106–7 eggs continued ghost shark 201
giant clam 40–41
clownfish 100–101
jawfish 92–3
abyssal zone 191 coastal waters 7 lionfish 33 gills 58, 59, 107, 125
algae 41, 111, 191 colors 70, 114, 127 loggerhead turtle 138 Great Barrier Reef 192
anemones 76, 77, 100, 199, 201 communication, sperm whale 171 pygmy seahorse 29 great white shark 36–9, 79
angel shark 35 cone snail 48 seahorses 118 Greenland shark 154–5
anglerfish 18–19 copepods 118 electricity, torpedo ray 180–81 groupers 15
Antarctic Ocean 34, 110–11 coral reefs 6, 192–3, 199, 203 eyes 12, 13, 50, 129, 152, 164, 173, 174, 177
Arctic 56, 155 courtship, seahorses 118 H
arms, starfish 54, 55 crabs 116, 134, 153 F
blue swimming crab 26–7 hammerheads 164–7
B boxer crab 76–7 feeding frenzies 47, 68, 186 harpoons 23, 48
hearing, silky shark 186
crocodile icefish 34
feelers 129, 168
bamboo shark, brown-banded 108–9 cuttlefish, broadclub 169 filter feeders 60 horn shark, California 16–17
banded sea snake 121 fins 17, 33, 35, 47, 51, 52, 66, 67, 70, 71, hydroids 185
barnacles 81, 199 D 181 hydrothermal vents (black smokers) 7, 195
barrel shrimp 150–51 fish
basking shark 10–11 deep sea 6, 7, 190–91, 200–201 blue-streak cleaner wrasse 106–7 I
batfish, red-lipped 52–3 defenses clownfish 100–101
beaks 126, 139 boxer crab 77 crocodile icefish 34 icefish, crocodile 34
biting reef worm 44–5 clownfish 100 deep-sea fish 6, 200–201 iguana, marine 98–9
bivalves 40 cone snail 48 flying fish 66–7 ink, cuttlefish 169
black smokers (hydrothermal vents) 7, 195 flying fish 66 garden eel 130–31 intestines, tiger shark 172
black swallower 191 lionfish 32–3 groupers 15
blacktip reef shark 158–61 parrotfish 156, 157 jawfish 92–3 J K
blacktip shark 68–9 pufferfish 42–3 lefteye flounder 12–13
blind shark 128–9 sea cucumber 114–15 lionfish 32–3 jawfish 92–3
blood seahorses 119 mobula ray 84–5 jaws 14, 15, 16, 25, 36, 44, 60, 63, 73, 75,
crocodile icefish 34 shy shark 94 moray eel 14–15, 192 113, 116, 117, 125, 171
great white shark 36 swell shark 30 parrotfish 156–7 jellyfish
sensing in water 37, 186 zebra shark 121 pufferfish 42–3 lion’s mane jellyfish 56–7
thresher shark 79 devilfish, spiny 122–3 pygmy seahorse 28–9 Portuguese man o’ war 22–3
blue shark 136–7 diving 196–7 red-lipped batfish 52–3 jumping
blue-streak cleaner wrasse 106–7 gentoo penguin 89 remora 72 blacktip shark 68
blue swimming crab 26–7 narwhal 21 ribbon-tailed stingray 50–51 flying fish 66
boxer crab 76–7 sperm whale 171 sailfish 70–71 great white shark 39
brains 169, 171 submersibles 194–5 sardines 87, 96–7 mobula ray 84–5
breathing 171 dogfish, spiny 117 sea lamprey 49 spinner dolphin 81
broadclub cuttlefish 169 dolphins 7, 36, 178 Sloane’s viperfish 62–3 krill, Antarctic 110–11, 113, 136
broadnose sevengill shark 178–9 spinner dolphin 80–81 spiny devilfish 122–3
bronze whaler 86–7 torpedo ray 180–81 L
brown-banded bamboo shark 108–9 E see also sharks
bull shark 102–5, 197 flatfish 12–13 lamprey, sea 49
burrows 93, 131 eels flippers, loggerhead turtle 138, 139 leaping see jumping
garden eel 130–31 flounder, lefteye 12–13 lefteye flounder 12–13
C moray eel 14–15, 192 flying fish 66–7 lemon shark 140–43
eggs
frilled shark 124–5, 190
light zones 191
California horn shark 16–17 barrel shrimp 151 lionfish 32–3
camouflage 13, 25, 29, 30, 35, 50, 52, 122, blue swimming crab 27 G lion’s mane jellyfish 56–7
127, 169 California horn shark 17 liver, shark 10, 172
catshark, small spotted 152–3 common octopus 126, 127 garden eel 130–31 lizards 98–9
clam, giant 40–41 giant clam 40 gentoo penguin 88–9 loggerhead turtle 138–9

206

M red blood cells 34 sharks continued T
shy shark 94–5
red-lipped batfish 52–3
mackerel 47 reef sharks 190, 192, 198 silky shark 186–7 tails 35, 50, 78, 79, 82
mako, shortfin 82–3 blacktip reef shark 158–61 small spotted catshark 152–3 teeth 15, 16, 19, 21, 25, 36, 49, 58, 63, 73,
mammals whitetip reef shark 132–3 spiny dogfish 117 99, 116, 117, 125, 146, 171, 173, 185
manatee 202–3 reef worm, biting 44–5 starry smooth-hound 116 tentacles
sea otter 134–5 reefs 6, 192–3, 199, 203 swell shark 30–31 anemones 100
walrus 146–7 remora 72 thresher shark 78–9 lion’s mane jellyfish 56–7
see also dolphins; whales reptiles tiger shark 172–5 Portuguese man o’ war 22–3
manatee 202–3 marine iguana 98–9 whale shark 58–61, 197 sea cucumber 115
manta ray 7 sea snakes 121, 148–9 whitetip reef shark 132–3 thresher shark 78–9
mantis shrimp 176–7 turtles 138–9, 172, 203 wobbegong 24–5 tides 7
marine iguana 98–9 ribbon-tailed stingray 50–51 zebra shark 120–21 tiger shark 172–5
megamouth shark 112–13 shells 26, 27, 40, 138 tope shark, common 144–5
migration 10, 49, 58, 82, 97, 137, 139,145, 164 S shipwrecks 198–9 torpedo ray 180–81
midnight zone 191
tracking animals 203
shoals see packs and schools
mimicry 121 sailfish 7, 70–71 shortfin mako 82–3 tube feet 55, 114, 115
mobula ray 84–5 sandtiger shark 182–5 shrimp 192 tuna 47, 82
mollusks 40 sardine 87, 96–7 barrel shrimp 150–51 tunicate 200
moray eel 14–15, 192 sawshark 168 mantis shrimp 176–7 turtles 172, 203
mouths 10, 12, 14, 15, 16, 28, 33, 49, 51, 54, scalloped hammerhead 166 shy shark 94–5 loggerhead turtle 138–9
58, 63, 73, 75, 93, 113, 118 schools see packs and schools silky shark 186–7 tusks 21, 146, 147
muscles scuba divers 197 skin 99, 123, 127, 133, 152, 169, 187 twilight zone 190
giant clam 40 sea apple 115 sleep 146, 147, 156
great white shark 36, 37 sea cucumber 114–15 slime 100, 156, 157 V
shortfin mako 82 sea floor 12, 200–201 Sloane’s viperfish 62–3
mussels 54, 134 sea lamprey 49 small spotted catshark 152–3 venom
sea lion 94 smooth-hound, starry 116 biting reef worm 44
N O sea otter 134–5 snails 48, 169 cone snail 48
lionfish 32
sea snakes 121, 148–9
snakes, sea 121, 148–9
narwhal 20–21 sea urchins 199, 201 speed Portuguese man o’war 22–3
nurse shark 72–5 seahorses 118–19 blue shark 136 pufferfish 42
oceanic whitetip shark 46–7 pygmy seahorse 28–9 broadnose sevengill shark 178 ribbon-tailed stingray 51
octopuses 126–7, 169, 191 seals 36, 39, 154, 155 California horn shark 17 sea cucumber 114
otter, sea 134–5 seaweed 98, 99 flying fish 66 sea snakes 148, 149
sensors 164, 165, 168, 176 gentoo penguin 88 spiny devilfish 122
P sevengill shark, broadnose 178–9 great white shark 36 spiny dogfish 117
sharks 6, 197
Greenland shark 155
viperfish, Sloane’s 62–3
Pacific Ocean 195 angel shark 35 mobula ray 85
packs and schools 21, 85, 87, 97, 110, 111, basking shark 10–11 Portuguese man o’ war 23 W Z
117, 136, 142, 160, 166, 183 blacktip reef shark 158–61 red-lipped batfish 52
predators 60–1, 68–9, 79, 87, 160, 183 blacktip shark 68–9 sailfish 70–71 walking fish
parasites 85, 107 blind shark 128–9 shortfin mako 82 brown-banded bamboo shark 108
parrotfish 156–7 blue shark 136–7 Sloane’s viperfish 63 California horn shark 17
penguin, gentoo 88–9 broadnose sevengill shark 178–9 tiger shark 173 common octopus 126
pincers, crabs 27, 76, 77 bronze whaler 86–7 sperm whale 170–71 red-lipped batfish 52
plankton 6, 7 brown-banded bamboo shark 108–9 spines 32, 33, 42, 43, 50, 51, 117, 122 spiny devilfish 122
plankton feeders 10, 28, 41, 49, 58, 77 bull shark 102–5, 197 spinner dolphin 80–81 walrus 146–7
poisons see venom California horn shark 16–17 spiny devilfish 122–3 whale shark 58–61
polar seas 6 common tope shark 144–5 spiny dogfish 117 whaler, bronze 86–7
pollution 203 frilled shark 124–5, 190 spotted catshark, small 152–3 whales 36
porcupinefish 43 ghost shark 201 squid 125, 136, 153, 169, 171 narwhal 21
Portuguese man o’ war 22–3 great white shark 36–9, 79 starfish 54–5 sperm whale 170–71
pregnancy 125, 140, 141, 144, 158 Greenland shark 154–5 starry smooth-hound 116 whitetip reef shark 132–3
pufferfish 42–3 hammerhead 164–7 stingrays 50–51, 164 whitetip shark, oceanic 46–7
pygmy seahorse 28–9 lemon shark 140–43 stings 16, 22, 23, 56, 77, 100 wings 35, 50, 51, 66, 85, 89, 181
megamouth shark 112–13 stomachs 32, 42, 54, 55 wobbegong 24–5
R nurse shark 72–5 submersibles 191, 194–5 worm, biting reef 44–5
suckers 114, 115, 127, 169
wrasse, blue-streak cleaner 106–7
oceanic whitetip shark 46–7
rays 183 reef sharks 190, 192, 198 sunlight zone 190 zebra shark 120–21
manta ray 7 sandtiger shark 182–5 swell shark 30–31 INDEX
mobula ray 84–5 sawshark 168 swim bladder 118
torpedo ray 180–81 shortfin mako 82–3 swordfish 82

207

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS












Dorling Kindersley would like to thank 40–41 Scubazoo.com: Adam Broadbent. 100–101 Scubazoo.com: Adam 166–167 Naturfoto www.naturephoto-
Alex Lloyd, Simon Murrell, Amy Child, Clare 40 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley (cl). Broadbent. 102–103 Scubazoo.com: Jason cz.com. 168 Alamy Images: Marty
Joyce, Richard Biesty, Vanya Mittal, Sanjay 43 FLPA: Biosphoto / Jean-Michel Mille Isley. 104–105 imagequestmarine.com: Snyderman / Stephen Frink Collection (cl).
Chauhan, and Sudakshina Basu for design (br). Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley (tr). James D. Watt. 106–107 Corbis: Chris 169 Corbis. 170–171 FLPA: Hiroya
assistance; Frankie Piscitelli, Vineetha 44–45 Corbis: Steve Jones / Stocktrek Newbert / Minden Pictures. 107 Scubazoo. Minakuchi / Minden Pictures.
Mokkil, Suefa Lee, Deeksha Saikia, and Images. 44 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley (cl). com: Adam Broadbent (cr). 108–109 FLPA: 172 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley (tr).
Rohan Sinha for editorial assistance; Liz 46–47 Alamy Images: Norbert Probst / Bruno Guenard / Biosphoto. 110–111 173 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley (tr, br).
Moore for additional picture research; Katie Imagebroker. 47 123RF.com: Krzysztof Corbis: Paul Nicklen / National Geographic 174–175 SeaPics.com: Eric Cheng.
John for proofreading; Hilary Bird for the Odziomek (cr). 48 Corbis: Alex Kerstitch / Society. 112–113 naturepl.com: Bruce 176–177 Dreamstime.com: Beverly Speed.
index; Steve Crozier for creative retouching; Visuals Unlimited (b). 49 Alamy Images: Rasner / Rotman. 115 Getty Images: Borut 177 Photoshot: LOOK (cr). 178–179
and Peter Bull for additional illustration. Blickwinkel (c). Photoshot: NHPA (cra). Furlan / WaterFrame (br). 117 Getty Alamy Images: Tobias Friedrich / F1online
51 Dorling Kindersley: David Peart (cl). Images: Doug Perrine / Photolibrary. digitale Bildagentur GmbH. 178 Scubazoo.
DK would also like to thank Simon 52–53 Alamy Images: Steve Bloom 118 Scubazoo.com: Gil Woolley (br). com: Jason Isley (cl). 180 Science Photo
Christopher, Jason Isley, and Gil Woolley at Images. 52 Alamy Images: Steve Bloom 119 Science Photo Library: Paul Zahl (cl). Library: Visuals Unlimited Inc. / Andy
Scubazoo for providing photographs and Images (cl). 54 Corbis: Water Rights / 120–121 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley. Murch (bc). 181 FLPA: Biosphoto / Bruno
consultancy advice. Scubazoo specialize Christophe Courteau (cl). 55 Corbis: 121 Getty Images: Gerard Soury / Oxford Guenard (tr). 182–183 Photoshot: Richard
in filming and photographing life under Brandon D. Cole (bl). Photoshot: Scientific (cr). 122 Dreamstime.com: Smith / NHPA. 184–185 Scubazoo.com:
the sea, and take an active role in marine Nigel Downer (cra). 56–57 Science Howard Chew / Singularone (cl). 122–123 Jason Isley. 186–187 FLPA: Imagebroker.
conservation projects all over the world. Photo Library: Alexander Semenov. Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley. 124–125 186 Science Photo Library: Andy Murch /
www.scubazoo.com 56 Dreamstime.com: Steven Melanson Photoshot. 125 FLPA: Kelvin Aitken (cr). Visuals Unlimited, Inc. (cl). 190 FLPA:
(cl). 59 FLPA: Biosphoto / Mike Veitch (tc). 127 Corbis: Chris Newbert / Minden Biosphoto / Pascal Kobeh (cla). Getty
The publisher would like to thank the Scubazoo.com: Adam Broadbent (cb). Pictures (tl). 128–129 Science Photo Images: (crb). Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley
following for their kind permission to 60–61 imagequestmarine.com: Michael Library: Visuals Unlimited Inc. / Andy (bc). 191 imagequestmarine.com: Peter
reproduce their photographs: Aw. 62–63 Science Photo Library: Dante Murch. 129 FLPA: Biosphoto / Gérard Herring (cb). naturepl.com: David Shale
Fenolio. 63 Science Photo Library: Dante Soury (cr). 130–131 Alamy Images: FLPA. (bl). 192 FLPA: Biosphoto / Yann Hubert (c).
(Key: a-above; b-below/bottom; c-center; Fenolio (cr). 66–67 FLPA: Martin Hale. 131 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley (cr). Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley (clb).
f-far; l-left; r-right; t-top) 66 Corbis: Hiroya Minakuchi / Minden 132–133 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley. 192–193 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley.
Pictures (cl). 68–69 Getty Images: 134–135 FLPA: Gerry Ellis / Minden 194–195 Getty Images: Brian J. Skerry.
1 OceanwideImages.com: C & M Fallows. Alexander Safonov / Moment Select. Pictures. 134 Getty Images: David 195 Science Photo Library: Alexis
4 Photoshot: Charles Hood (tc). Scubazoo. 68 Scubazoo.com: Roger Munns (cl). Courtenay / Oxford Scientific (cl). Rosenfeld (cb). Woods Hole
com: Adam Broadbent (tr). 5 Scubazoo. 70 FLPA: Minden Pictures / Pete Oxford 136–137 Alamy Images: Mark Conlin. Oceanographic Instititution: Image
com: Jason Isley (tl, tr, tc). 10–11 Photoshot: (tc). 72–73 Corbis: Andy Murch / Visuals 138 FLPA: Biosphoto / Brandon Cole (clb); courtesy Charles Fisher, Penn State /
Charles Hood. 10 Photoshot: Charles Unlimited. 73 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley Minden Pictures / Mitsuaki Iwago (cl). NSF, NOAA / HOV Alvin 2002 (cr).
Hood (cl). 12–13 Scubazoo.com: Jason (cr). 74–75 Alamy Images: WaterFrame. Scubazoo.com: Christian Loader (tr). 196–197 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley.
Isley. 13 Scubazoo.com: Roger Munns (cr). 76–77 Scubazoo.com: Adam Broadbent. 139 Alamy Images: Martin Strmiska (cr). 197 Getty Images: Wayne Lynch (c).
14 Alamy Images: WaterFrame (cl). 77 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley (cr). 140–141 Alamy Images: WaterFrame. Scubazoo.com: Adam Broadbent (bc);
15 Corbis: Stuart Westmorland (br). 78–79 FLPA: Norbert Probst / Imagebroker. 142–143 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley. Jason Isley (crb). 198–199 Science Photo
16 Getty Images: Jeff Rotman / Photolibrary 79 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley (cr). 144–145 Alamy Images: Dan Sullivan. Library: Photostock-Israel. 198 Corbis:
(bl). 17 Dreamstime.com: Greg Amptman 80–81 Alamy Images: Anthony Pierce. 145 Photoshot: Charles Hood / Oceans Stephen Frink (bc, c). Scubazoo.com: Jason
(tl). Getty Images: Mark Conlin / Oxford 82–83 Getty Images: Masa Ushioda. Image (cr). 146–147 Robert Harding Isley (clb). 200–201 FLPA: Minden Pictures
Scientific (bl). 19 FLPA: Minden Pictures / 84–85 Science Photo Library: Christopher Picture Library: Reinhard Dirscherl. / Norbert Wu. 200 FLPA: Frans Lanting (c);
Norbert Wu (tl). 20–21 Getty Images: Paul Swann. 85 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley (cr). 147 Alamy Images: Photoshot Holdings Minden Pictures / Norbert Wu (bc). Science
Nicklen. 23 Corbis: Minden Pictures / 86–87 SeaPics.com: Doug Perrine. Ltd (cr). 148 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley Photo Library: Dr. Ken MacDonald (clb).
Norbert Wu (bl). 24–25 Dreamstime.com: 87 Corbis: Stuart Westmorland (cr). (cl). 148–149 Scubazoo.com: Christian 202–203 Science Photo Library: Douglas
Kkg1. 25 Photoshot: Picture Alliance (cr). 88–89 Photoshot: Andy Rouse. 89 Getty Loader. 150–151 Getty Images: David Faulkner. 203 Alamy Images: Rheinhard
26 Auscape: John Lewis (cl). 27 Corbis: Images: Danita Delimont / Gallo Images Wrobel / Visuals Unlimited, Inc. Dirscherl (cr). Scubazoo.com: Roger
Kevin Fleming (tr); Lynda Richardson (bc). (cr). 92–93 Scubazoo.com: Gil Woolley. 151 Photoshot: NHPA (cr). 152–153 Getty Munns (cb). 204 Scubazoo.com: Jason
28–29 Scubazoo.com: Roger Munns. 93 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley (cr). Images: Marevision. 154–155 Photoshot: Isley (tr, ftr); Christian Loader (tc).
30–31 OceanwideImages.com: Andy 94–95 SeaPics.com: Doug Perrine. Saul Gonor / Oceans Image. 156–157 Getty 206 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley (tr, ftr);
Murch. 30 SuperStock: Mark Conlin (cl). 94 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley (cl). Images: Visuals Unlimited, Inc. / Reinhard Roger Munns (tc). 208 Scubazoo.com:
33 Getty Images: Nature, underwater and 96–97 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley. Dirscherl. 156 Alamy Images: Adam Butler Jason Isley (tr)
art photos. www.Narchuk.com / Moment 97 FLPA: Ingo Arndt / Minden Pictures (cr). (cl). 158–159 Getty Images: Barcroft Media Endpapers: Dreamstime.com: Dream69 0
Open (crb). 34 Getty Images: Doug Allan / 98 Alamy Images: National Geographic / Contributor. 160–161 Getty Images:
Oxford Scientific (cra). SuperStock: Minden Image Collection (cra). 99 Alamy Images: Sakis Papadopoulos / The Image Bank. All other images © Dorling Kindersley
Pictures (c). 36 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley Karen & Ian Stewart (tr). Robert Harding 164 Alamy Images: Martin Strmiska (br).
(cl, tr). 38–39 Getty Images: David Jenkins / Picture Library: Michael S. Nolan (crb). Photoshot: Michael Patrick O'Neill (cl). For further information see:
Robert Harding World Imagery. 100 Scubazoo.com: Jason Isley (cl). 165 FLPA: Imagebroker / Norbert Probst (tr). www.dkimages.com

208


Click to View FlipBook Version