
Seagrass meadows, such as this one composed of turtle grass (Thalassia testudinum and manatee grass (Syringodium filiforme), are an important shallow water habitat.
Heather Dine, Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary

A humpback whale breaching in Antarctic waters.
Ari Friedlaender

This still of a giant squid is from the first video filmed of the species in its natural habitat.
NHK/NEP/Discovery Channel

Fish swim around the wreck of the HMT Bedfordshire, an Arctic fishing trawler that was converted into an anti-submarine warship during World War II, and sunk off the coast of North Carolina.

Ari Friedlaender, a research scientist at the Duke University Marine Lab, tags a blue whale.
Jeremy Goldbogen

These zooplankton collected on a research cruise include a jellyfish, a lanternfish, a snipe eel, two large orange shrimp, a fuzzy pyrosome (which is bioluminescent), and several smaller animals.
Exploring the Inner Space of the Celebes Sea 2007 Exploration, NOAA-OE.

The whitish spots on this fish are individual parasitic trematode worms.
Hans Hillewaert

A whale shark swims with a diver off the coast of East Africa.
Caine Delacy

Red Pigfish and Blue Mao-Mao school at the edge of a cavern in New Zealand's Poor Knights Islands. Read photographer Brian Skerry's story behind this photo.
Brian Skerry, National Geographic

The National Marine Sanctuary system is a network of 13 marine protected areas managed by NOAA, in addition to the Papahānaumokuākea (Northwest Hawaiian Islands) Marine National Monument.
NOAA, Office of National Marine Sanctuaries
