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Scotoplanes globosa, commonly known as the sea pig, is a species of sea cucumber that lives in the deep sea. [1] It was first described by Hjalmar Théel, a Swedish scientist. Scotoplanes globosa, along with numerous other sea cucumbers were discovered by Théel during an expedition on HMS Challenger between the years of 1873-1876.
Scotoplanes, like many sea cucumbers, often occur in huge densities, sometimes numbering in the hundreds when observed. Early collections have recorded groups of up to 300-600 individuals. Sea pigs are also known to host different parasitic invertebrates, including gastropods (snails) and small tanaid crustaceans. [9]
A Barbie-pink sea pig sauntering along the seafloor. A transparent unicumber hovering in the depths. ... These wonders are just an initial snapshot of fantastic creatures discovered 16,400 feet ...
A) of sea cucumber (often known as "sea pigs") as hosts and can be found on top of and under Scotoplanes. The Scotoplanes reduce the risk of predation for the N. diomedeae, while the Scotoplanes are not harmed from being hosts, which supports the consensus that the two organisms have a commensal relationship. [23]
A sea pig walks among some clams found at the bottom of the ocean floor near the methane seep off the coast of Chile. The seeps are the deepest and furthest north found off the coast of the South ...
Scientists found the spiny animal while aboard a submersible in the South China Sea. ‘Large’ sea creature — with ‘blade-like’ claws — discovered as new species. See it
Scotoplanes, a genus of deep-sea holothurians (sea cucumbers) commonly called sea pigs; Sea Swine (a.k.a. Porcus Marinus), an historical name for porpoise and mythical creatures; A local name for the dugong; The name of Guinea pigs in some countries; Hawaiian flagtail, sometimes called puaʻa kai (sea pig)
Predators might overlook the sea slug's transparent body or be startled by its bioluminescence. "It kind of acts as a burglar alarm," Robison said. MBARI has been using ROVs since the late 1980s.