No Sustainable Ocean Catches
· Abalone: a large edible sea snail of coastal waters
· Albacore: a prized species of tuna
· Anchovy: a small, oily fish of the Atlantic and Pacific, providing food for many fish, marine mammals, and birds
· Angelfish: a bright-colored fish of coral reefs
· Barnacle: an arthropod of coastal waters that attaches itself to rocks and shells
· Barracuda: a tropical and subtropical predatory fish with a feisty appearance
· Blue Crab: a delicacy on the eastern coast of the US
· Blue Whale: the world’s largest marine animal
· Bull Shark: an aggressive shark that canthrive in both salt water and fresh water
· Cleaner wrasse: a coral-inhabiting fish that removes parasites from other fish
· Clownfish: a small tropical fish of the Indian and Pacific Oceans, with orange and white stripes
· Cod: a deep-sea fish, formerly a staple food in Europe and America, now greatly reduced in numbers in the Atlantic
· Conch: an edible shellfish with a distinctive spiral shell
· Coral: polyps, mostly tropical, mostly living in huge colonies along with photosynthesizing microorganisms
· Crown of Thorns: a larges ea star that feeds on corals
· Cuttlefish: a squid-like creature belonging to the mollusk family
· Dolphin: an intelligent, vocal, social sea mammal
· Dottyback: a brightly colored fish of coral reefs
· Dragonet: a showy tropical fish of the Indian and Pacific Oceans, with dragon-like eyes and fins
· Driftfish: perch-like fish of tropical and subtropical waters, often associated with jellyfish or sargasso weed
· Dugong or Sea Cow: a herbivorous marine mammal, a threatened species of the coastal Indian Ocean
· Dungeness Crab: a large, prized edible crab from the western coast of North America
· Eel: long-bodied fishes mostly living in shallow waters
· Elephant Seal: a large seal, with big-nosed males, living in the waters around western North America and Antarctica
· Emperor Shrimp: a bright-colored shrimp of the Indo-Pacific region that lives cooperatively another sea animals
· Estuarine Crocodile: the world’s largest living reptile, found in Southeast Asian and Australian estuaries
· Fan Worm: a worm that lives in a tube and feeds by straining seawater with its feathery tentacles
· Flounder: a flatfish, camouflaged to match the ocean bottom, with both its eyes located on one side
· Flying Fish: a tropical fish with wing-like pectoral fins
· Fugu: a puffer fish, a Japanese delicacy,whose body contain a nerve toxin
· Fugu (smaller fish at front) with Amberjack
· Giant Squid: one of the largest living animals, up to 43 feet long, found in the world’s deep oceans
· Great White Shark: a large, aggressive shark with a white belly and gray back
· Grouper: a stubby, big-mouthed fish; many can change sex from female to male
· Grunion: a small, slender fish that spawns on beaches at night in Southern California and Baja California
· Haddock: a gray bottom-dwelling fish endemict o the North Atlantic Ocean
· Hake: a food fish with an elongated body and a large head
· Halibut: world’s largest flatfish,diamond-shaped, with one dark side and one light
· Herring: a popular food fish that travels in large schools
· Humpback Whale: a majestic-looking black-and-white whale with long, wide pectoral fins
· Irukandji: a tiny but highly venomous jellyfish mostly found off the Australian coast
· Isopods: crustaceans, seagoing relatives of sowbugs and pillbugs
· Jellyfish: among the world’s most ancient multi celled animals, with a soft, jelly-like “bell” and tentacles
· John Dory: a coastal fish with an eye like black mark on each side, and long, spiny dorsal fins
· Killer Whale or Orca: a toothed,predatory black-and-white whale
· King Mackerel or Kingfish: a medium-sized food fish of the Atlantic coast of the Americas
· Krill: tiny shrimp-like crustaceans, very numerous in all oceans, important food for other creatures
· Lamprey: a jawless fish with an eel-like body,circular sucking mouth, and triangular teeth; many are bloodsuckers
· Leafy Sea Dragon: a fishwith seaweed-like appendages for camouflage
· Ling: a long slender fish of the North Atlantic
· Lionfish: a venomous fish with red and white stripes and spiny dorsal fins
· Lobster: a large crustacean with a musculartail and two large claws
· Mackerel: a food fish with a striped back and deeply-pronged tail
· Mahi-mahi or Dorado: a medium-sized fish with a long back fin running from head to tail
· Manatee or Sea Cow: a large herbivorous sea mammal, related to the dugong, with rounded flippers
· Manta Ray: a very large ray (up to 20 feet), a filter-feeder of open oceans
· Megalodon: an extinct giant shark, one of the largest predators ever, up to 65 feet long
· Mulloway: a predatory fish mostly found on Australian rocky shorelines
· Mussel: a two-shelled mollusk; most attach themselves to shoreline rocks with tough threads
· Narwhal: an Arctic whale whose males have along tusk
· Nautilus: a primitive mollusk of the tropical Pacific, with a spiral shell and tentacles
· Needle Fish: a slender-bodied, long-jawed fish of shallow water
· Nemertea or Ribbon Worm: a primitive invertebrate with a stinging organ in its front end
· Nudibranch: a colorful marine slug
· Oarfish: a long, slender, seldom-seen fish;20-foot specimens occasionally wash up on beaches
· Octopus: a color-changing mollusk with eight suction-cup-bearing tentacles; the most intelligent invertebrate
· Olive Sea Snake: a highly venomous swimming snake of Indo-Pacific coral reefs
· Ostracod or Seed Shrimp: a tiny,two-shelled crustacean, abounding in oceans as well as in humid environments on land
· Oyster: a two-shelled mollusk eaten as a delicacy around the world
· Pilchard or Sardine: a small, oily fish that typically swims in large schools
· Plankton: tiny marine organisms of all kinds—animals, plants, bacteria, algae, protists—that play a major role in the world’s food chains
· Porcupine Fish: a spiny tropical marine fish that can inflate itself
· Porpoise: a small toothed marine mammal,related to dolphins but with different-shaped nose and teeth
· Prawn: a name for the larger kinds of shrimp
· Pufferfish or Puffers: poisonous fish(including fugu, above) that inflate into balloon-like shapes when threatened
· Quahog: a round, hard-shelled clam of the US Atlantic coast
· Queen Conch: a large edible sea snail of the tropical and subtropical western Atlantic
· Queensland Blenny: a small fish with comb-liketeeth native to coral reefs of the western Pacific
· Quillfish: a long, thin, seldom-seen fish of the northeastern Pacific
· Red Waratah Anemone: a red anenome (a polyp with stinging tentacles) of the shores of Australia and New Zealand
· Requiem Shark: a group of aggressive shark species of warm oceans or fresh water
· Ringed Seal: a small, ear less seal native to the Arctic, that makes breathing holes in sea ice
· Ross Seal: a large seal endemic to theAntarctic ice
· Sea Cucumber: a soft, sausage-shaped echinoderm with leathery skin and a tentacled mouth
· Sea Horse: a small, upright-swimming fish (it really is a fish) with a horse-like head
· Sea Lion: a large, eared seal with long limbs acting as flippers
· Sea Otter: a furry marine mammal of the north Pacific that eats sea urchins, mollusks, crustaceans, and fish
· Sea Turtle: seven species of turtles that have flippers for limbs; they may live for hundreds of years
· Sea Urchin: an echinoderm, often with a spherical body covered with long spines
· Sponge: a marine invertebrate with a porous body without distinct tissues or organs
· Starfish or Sea Star: predatory star-shaped echinoderms that crawl on tiny tube feet
· Swordfish: a large, migratory fish with a sword-like snout
· Tiger Shark: a large shark (up to 16 feet) of tropical and subtropical oceans, with dark stripes
· Tilefish: a small, spiny fish of tropical and temperate oceans, preferring coral reefs and sandy areas
· Trumpetfish: a long, thin fish of the tropical western Atlantic, that often dangles or swims vertically to blend in with its surroundings
· Tube Worms: a variety of different marine invertebrates that secrete hard tubes to protect themselves
· Tun Shell: a tropical sea snail with a rounded shell said to resemble a “tun” or wine cask
· Umbrella Shell: a sea slug (gastropod)with a spotted skirt-shaped body extending from its shell
· Unicornfish: an Indo-Pacific fish with a horn-like protrusion on its forehead
· Vampire Squid: a primitive cephalopo diving at great depths, with light-emitting spots, with dark webbing connecting its tentacles
· Velvet Crab: a small swimming crab of the North Atlantic and western Mediterranean
· Violet Sea Snail: a purple sea snail of tropical and subtropical oceans that floats on a raft of mucus bubbles
· Viper Fish: a deep-sea fish with long,sharp teeth, big jaws, and an illuminated bell-shaped lure
· Walrus: a large Arctic marine mammal with long tusks and whiskers
· Whapuku or Wreckfish: a large fish,prized for food, from the seas off New Zealand and Australia
· Whiting: a food fish of the cod family, of the shallow coastal waters off Europe
· Xiphias: Latin for "swordfish," the genus name for the swordfish group
· Xiphosura: The 400-million-year-old class of arthropods that includes horseshoe crabs, which are related to spiders and ticks
· Yellowfin Tuna: a large, fast-moving fish of the open ocean, with yellow dorsal fins
· Yellowtail Amberjack: a large food fish of the Indo-Pacific region
· Yellow Tang: a small bright yellow fish of Indo-Pacific reefs, popular in saltwater aquariums
· Zooplankton: the huge variety of tiny animals,eggs, and larvae that drift in oceans
· Zebra Turkey fish: a spotted-and-striped spiny fish of shallow tropical Indo-Pacific waters