Monterey Bay Habitat Animals

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Our Monterey Bay Habitats exhibit is really five exhibits in one! In this slice of the bay, animals swim from open waters over deep reefs, past shale reefs and over a sandy seafloor to wharf pilings.
White sturgeon

White sturgeon

This prehistoric-looking fish with whiskers isn’t a shark, or a catfish. The white sturgeon is like no other fish! Instead of scales, five rows of bony plates (scutes) reach from its gills to its tail, covering its sandpaperlike skin. It also sports sharklike qualities including a cartilaginous skeleton and a sharklike tail.
 
Halibut

Halibut

If you see a rather odd-looking fish lying or swimming on its side in the Monterey Bay exhibit, you’re watching one of the flatfishes. If this flatfish has a large mouth and a lateral line that arches high over the side fin, it’s a California halibut. Notice that both eyes are on one side and pointed upward. This side of the fish is brown or blackish with light and dark splotches—the side without eyes is usually white.
 
Sevengill shark

Sevengill shark

Look for this big beefy shark sitting on the bottom of the exhibit, or cruising through the deep reef. As its name suggests, a sevengill shark has seven pairs of gill slits (most sharks have only five). Its back and sides are reddish brown to silvery gray, or olive-brown and speckled with many small black spots. The shark’s underbelly is cream colored. Other features include a wide head with a blunt nose and only one dorsal (top) fin—most sharks have two.
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Monterey Bay Habitat Animals