00:00Hidden Dangers, Venomous Creatures Lurking in Tropical Waters
00:04A box jellyfish can drift almost invisibly through warm water.
00:09Across reefs, tide pools, coral slopes, and open seas,
00:14venomous sea creatures hide, sting, strike, and defend themselves in bright water.
00:19The box jellyfish moves through Indo-Pacific water with long tentacles trailing behind its clear bell.
00:25The blue-ringed octopus flashes bright blue rings when threatened, hiding in shallow Australian tide pools and coral rubble.
00:33The stonefish rests on reef bottoms, looking like rock, while venomous spines rise from its back.
00:40The cone snail crawls across tropical reefs and sand, using a harpoon-like tooth to catch small prey.
00:46The beaked sea snake swims through warm ocean water, hunting fish around reefs and coastal shallows.
00:53The lionfish spreads striped fins near reefs, carrying venomous spines while swallowing small fish in one quick strike.
01:01The stingray rests under sand and shallow water, leaving only eyes and a long tail visible.
01:07The crown-of-thorn starfish crawls over coral reefs, using venomous spines while feeding on coral tissue.
01:14The fire coral grows on tropical reefs, where a careless hand can meet painful stinging cells.
01:19These creatures share one pattern, bright colors, hidden bodies, spines, tentacles, and warning displays help them survive.
01:30When clear water looks calm, one hidden spine or drifting tentacle can change the whole swim.
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