70% of the earth is covered in water. Can you imagine the number of creatures living in that space? Well, here’s some aquatic animals information for kids that will leave them astonished. The never-ending water body is filled with various aquatic animals that are interesting, unique, and mysterious. Although we have explored only five percent of the water bodies, we have already discovered around 230,000 species. So, if your child enjoys learning about marine animals, our list covers the detailed information and fun facts to keep them entertained. Read on to know more.
What Are Aquatic Animals?
Water or aquatic animals are either vertebrate or invertebrate animals, which live in aquatic all through or most of their lives. These animals may breathe air through lungs or gills by extracting the oxygen that is dissolved in water.
Types Of Water Animals
Aquatic animals living in freshwater are called freshwater animals and those living in saltwater bodies such as sea, oceans, etc., are called marine animals.
Varieties Of Aquatic Animals
1. Sea turtles
One of the few animals with blue blood, octopuses are considered the most intelligent of all the invertebrates. Scientific studies are increasingly confirming that they are sentient creatures (2).
2. Seahorses
They are unique in a way that the male carries the babies, instead of the female. The female deposits her eggs in a pouch in the male. The mating ritual includes dancing and intertwining the tails. Pregnancy lasts for two to five weeks with just one percent of offspring surviving to reach adulthood (3).
3. Blue whales
They are the largest animals and have evolved from the hippopotamus. They are an endangered species with just 4,500 left on the planet. They can swim up to five miles an hour, but on sensing danger, they can speed up to 30 miles an hour. The best part about blue whales is that they can sleep while swimming with half its brain functioning.
4. Dolphins
It is one of the most beautiful, intelligent, and friendly aquatic animals, are the only mammals that are born tail first. They take care of and nurture old or hurt members in a group, and the young ones live with their mothers until they are three years old.
5. Electric eels
They belong to knife fish family and are one of the 500 fishes that can produce electricity. The skin of the eel insulates it from its electric attack, but if the eel is wounded it could shock itself. The electric shock of an eel is powerful enough to knock down a horse and can prove fatal to a human. Some eels produce enough electricity to light ten bulbs!
6. Jellyfish
They are one of the oldest aquatic organisms and came into existence even before the dinosaurs. They have been around for 500 to 700 million years. Some species possess light-sensitive organs and can glow in the dark. The jellyfish does not have bones, brain, heart, and head (4).
7. Oysters
They can change genders depending on the mating situation. They can also change back to their original genders (5).
8. Great white shark
It is one of the most well-known species of the aquatic animals and the largest predators in the oceans. Sharks may attack humans, but they don’t eat them as humans lack fat. Great Whites in South Africa are famous for their majestic jumps from water. Male sharks mature when they turn ten while females mature when they turn 15. Females give birth to two to ten sharks after a year of pregnancy. Baby sharks care for themselves from the moment they are born; parent sharks don’t exhibit parental care (6).
9. Piranha
It means fish tooth, and they possess powerful jaw bone and pointed sharp teeth. They have extremely sensitive organs that help them detect blood in oceans just like the sharks. Piranhas are not only omnivorous but also cannibals, with an insatiable appetite for blood.
10. Cuttlefish
It is a slow swimmer, and swims by emitting out a large quantity of water from its mantle. The phenomenon is known as jet propulsion, and it aids cuttlefish in escaping predators. They also release ink to escape from shark and large fishes. Cuttlefish was widely used as source of ink in ancient times (7).
11. Walrus
Being mammals, can easily stay under water for 30 minutes without having to come to the surface to breathe. They are incredibly protective of one another and would rush to help any walrus under attack.
12. Starfish
They can change their gender at any time, reproduce sexually or asexually, and in sexual reproduction, the females produce millions of eggs. Though most starfish have only five arms, some could have about 20 to 40 arms as well. They can regenerate a body part within a year (8).
13. Giant squids
They are one of the most mysterious animals and live at depths of 2000 to 3000 feet in the oceans. Information on giant squids depends entirely on the carcasses found at beaches. They don’t hunt predators but ambush them. Some produce luminescent inks to escape predators.
14. Dugong
It is popular as ‘sea cow’ and is one of the few vegetarian aquatic mammals. They survive only on sea grass and can consume about 88 pounds of seaweed every day. They are a vulnerable species that need protection and are put up in various sanctuaries across the world (9).
How Do Water Animals Breathe?
How do aquatic animals breathe underwater and what if there were no oxygen to breathe? A few large or very small animals living in moist environments breathe through the skin. The exchange of gasses takes place through the skin and is called an integumentary exchange. Animals living in water have gills, which are extensions of their outer membranes and contain very thin cells designed to allow gas exchange as the water passes through them.
What Do Aquatic Animals Eat?
Aquatic Animals eat a variety of foods. Animals like corals, sponges, and whales eat small crustaceans called plankton. Ocean fishes have different feeding habits. Usually, most ocean fishes eat each other and eat crustaceans like shrimp, crabs, and krill. They also feed on algae, kelp, plankton, detritus, and cephalopods like octopus and squid, besides echinoderms like sea urchins. A few ocean fishes are scavengers and feed on the carcasses of other marine animals.
Which Ocean Animals Eat Plants?
Many marine animals are carnivores. But a few such as sea turtles, manatees, and dugongs, are specialized in feeding on underwater plants. Marine fishes such as marbled parrotfish are primarily herbivorous. They graze on algae and seagrass in nearshore waters. Other species like surgeonfish and pinfish directly feed on seagrasses.
How Do Aquatic Animals Survive In The Ocean?
Marine organisms have adapted to diverse habitats and environmental conditions in oceans. They have made several physiological, behavioral, and structural adaptations for survival. Morphological or structural adaptations were made to suit and survive in a particular habitat. Physiological adaptations made by sea animals are more related to the way their body metabolism works. Aquatic animals have learnt several behavioral adaptations to survive and escape from predators.
Potential Threat To Water Animals
Due to the fragility of the environments in which they live, conservationists often have a special concern for aquatic animals. Aquatic animals are prone to pressures like destructive fishing, overfishing, climate change, and marine pollution which comes from land and air. Harsh chemicals, which pollute water, show devastating effects on marine species.
21 Aquatic Animals Information And Facts For Children
Read a book on aquatic animals and discuss it. Help them make aquatic-animal crafts. Help them create an interesting and informative aquatic animal fact book. Play interactive games based on aquatic animals. Let them watch videos and documentaries on aquatic animals.