Last but not least my favourite rockfish the Tiger Rockfish (Sebastes nigrocinctus)
This flashy fellow devours small fish like a tiger!
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There are many different species of rockfish that we differentiate based on their striking colours. This one is the China Rockfish (Sebastes nebulosus). It discourages predators with poisonous spines on it's back!
Canary Rockfish from Andrew Murgatroyd on Vimeo.
The Canary Rockfish (Sebastes pinniger) lives on the rocky reefs of the Salish Sea. It eats crustaceans and small fish and can live for a very long time! Because they reach sexual maturity at around 15 years of age, rockfish, usually marketed as snapper, are threatened by overfishing.
Learn more about rockfish fishery in BC on the Literasea Marine Science blog. This sneaky fellow is the Buffalo Sculpin (Enophrys bison). He is one of the largest sculpins on the coast and can grow up to 15 inches long! He blends into his surroundings with some flashy camouflage and sits perfectly still to avoid being seen. Watch out for the spines on his cheeks!
Octopus! from Andrew Murgatroyd on Vimeo.
The Giant Pacific Octopus (Enteroctopus dofleini) is one of the most intelligent invertebrates on the planet! They love eating crabs and shrimp which they crush with their beak, the only truly hard part of their bodies. Because they are so soft and smart they ofter escape from captivity. At the Shaw Ocean Discovery Centre the newly acquired Octopus somehow escaped from it's tank on the very first night! Luckily it was found before it dried out, and will be returned to the wild in a few months. They use special organs on their skin called chromatophores to change colour and can even make themselves all wrinkly if they want to hide.
Check out this video where a Giant Pacific Octopus wants to play with Asta! Check out how he changes colour
Spotted Ratfish from Andrew Murgatroyd on Vimeo.
You’ve spotted the spotted ratfish (Hydrolagus colliei)! This curious creature is a distant relative of sharks, with whom the ratfish shares a skeleton made of cartilage! Although sharks can have thousands of teeth in their lifetime, the ratfish has only 6 teeth in it’s downturned mouth. It uses these teeth to chomp and crush clams and crabs it finds on the seafloor. The spine on the ratfish’s dorsal fin can deliver a poisonous sting to predators, and that shimmering stripe along it’s side is called the lateral line and it is used as an electroreceptor to detect prey!
Hooded Nudibranch from Andrew Murgatroyd on Vimeo.
Although they look similar, this little fella isn’t a jellyfish, it’s a sea slug!
It uses its’ hood, lined with tentacles to catch tiny food particles and plankton floating by in the water. Those little flaps that look like ears on the hood are called rhinophores and the hooded nudibranch uses them to smell it’s prey, and it’s predators. If it’s threatened it can detach from it’s hood and swim away, just like a lizard dropping it’s tail. This little guy is also a girl! Nudibranchs are hermaphroditic which means they have both male and female reproductive organs. ![]() This purple sea (Pisaster ochraceus) star can be found in a variety of colours! Further south in Washington and Oregon the ochre variety is more prevalent, and up here on Vancouver Island purple is far more common. This little fella looks like Tarzan swinging on a rope! It's very common to find these sea stars on dock pilings and rocky shores where they hunt for mussels, barnacles, limpets and snails. On their underside they have thousands of tiny tube feet which they control with their hydro-vasuclar system (which works just like the hydraulic systems on machines!)They have a yellow spot on the top and centre called the madroporite which is the organ they use to control this system. With a tight grip they can open a muscle, climb on top of it and then evert (eject) their stomachs to digest their food outside of their bodies! Not the most polite of dinner guests! Recently they have been subject to a massive die-off event due to Sea Star Wasting Syndrome which is causing them to literally melt into goo! Read more about it on our site here: Sea Star Wasting Syndrome Photo: Andrew Murgatroyd
We're happy to debut our new Vimeo page on the 4th day of fishmas with one of my favorite fish:
The Grunt Sculpin! The Grunt Sculpin from Andrew Murgatroyd on Vimeo.
This little dude is not only super cute he has some amazing adaptations to life on the ocean floor. For one, the Grunt Sculpin (Rhamphocottus richardsonii) uses his pectoral fins like legs to scoot across the ocean floor! If you didn't notice, he doesn't really look all that much like a fish at all. When threatened he can dive headfirst into an abandoned giant acorn barnacle shell and wave his tail to resemble a feeding barnacle. Sneaky Sneaky!
![]() Three Sea Nettles Two Wolf-Eels and a Hermit Crab in a Snail Shell! Watch out! These Sea-Nettles can be naughty not nice! They use stinging cells called nematocysts on their long streaming tentacles to stun small fish, crustaceans and plankton (and even unlucky humans!)
They are commonly seen drifting through the Salish Sea or washed up on beaches. Sea-Nettles can get quite big, with bells 30cm in diameter and tentacles extending for several feet. The white "tentacles" are actually called "oral arms" and are used to bring food to the jellyfish's mouth, on the the underside of the bell. |
Welcome to the 12 days of fish-mas gallery!At Christmas time in 2013 I made this gallery while working at the Shaw Ocean Discovery Centre! ArchivesCategories |