Save Our Seas

Save Our Seas S.O.S was started to help make an impact on saving and conserving our oceans for generations to come!

We are able to achieve this by donating 30% of all sales profit to non profit ocean conservation groups and ocean clean up groups!!

Hey everyone please like and share to help support my new bussiness!! We are more then just a clothing brand we are a mo...
10/13/2021

Hey everyone please like and share to help support my new bussiness!! We are more then just a clothing brand we are a movement whos goal is to spread Joy and Creativity while raising awareness for mental health!!!

This strange sea creature certainly isn't something you'd expect to find while fishing. Called a sea salp, this more or ...
05/21/2021

This strange sea creature certainly isn't something you'd expect to find while fishing. Called a sea salp, this more or less completely translucent marine invertebrate is actually quite common in the Southern Ocean.

These planktonic tunicates tend to be barrel-shaped and can move around by pumping water through their gelatinous bodies. Sea salps feed by filtering out phytoplankton from seawater.

They also tend to form large swarms in deep water and are sometimes found to be more abundant than krill in places.

Go to shop.spreadshirt.com/save-our-seas/  to help save our worlds oceans. 30% of all profits from sales will be donated...
05/21/2021

Go to shop.spreadshirt.com/save-our-seas/ to help save our worlds oceans. 30% of all profits from sales will be donated to both The Ocean Cleanup and the Coral Reef Alliance. Both of these organizations are nonprofits whos missions are to rid the oceans of plastic and preserve our oceans for generations to come!!!!!

Save Our Seas | 30 of all profits go to saving the Worlds Oceans!!!

Sea pen, any of the 300 species of the order Pennatulacea, colonial invertebrate marine animals of the class Anthozoa (p...
10/16/2020

Sea pen, any of the 300 species of the order Pennatulacea, colonial invertebrate marine animals of the class Anthozoa (phylum Cnidaria). The name sea pen derives from their resemblance to quill pens. They occur in shallow and deep waters from polar seas to the tropics.
If you haven't already go check out our merch line at shop.spreadshirt.com/save-our-seas/ or click the link in our bio to help save our worlds oceans. 30% of all profit from sales goes towards the Coral Reef Alliance and The Ocean Cleanup!!!

Sea dragons are some of the most ornately camouflaged creatures on the planet. Adorned with gossamer, leaf-shaped append...
10/02/2020

Sea dragons are some of the most ornately camouflaged creatures on the planet. Adorned with gossamer, leaf-shaped appendages over their entire bodies, they are perfectly outfitted to blend in with the seaweed and kelp formations they live amongst.
Endemic to the waters off south and east Australia, leafy sea dragons are closely related to seahorses and pipefish. Leafies are generally brown to yellow in body color with spectacular olive-tinted appendages.
Leafies are shaped to give themselves near-perfect camouflage in seaweed. But the leaf-like structures are not used for swimming. To move, this species uses two fins—one pectoral and one dorsal—that are so thin they are almost transparent.
If you haven't already go check out our merch line at shop.spreadshirt.com/save-our-seas/ or click the link in our bio to help save our worlds oceans. 30% of all profit from sales goes towards the Coral Reef Alliance and The Ocean Cleanup!!!

This bizarre-looking fish is also known as the Galapagos batfish and can be found at the bottom of the ocean. It's named...
09/30/2020

This bizarre-looking fish is also known as the Galapagos batfish and can be found at the bottom of the ocean. It's named for its red lips, which make it appear to be wearing lipstick. Although the red-lipped batfish appears to have legs, its limb-like appendages are actually fins, which the creature uses to stand on and to check out its surroundings.
If you haven't already go check out our merch line at shop.spreadshirt.com/save-our-seas/ or click the link in our bio to help save our worlds oceans. 30% of all profit from sales goes towards the Coral Reef Alliance and The Ocean Cleanup!!!

Celebrating  🐢 with this beautiful sea turtle!! Drop a 🐢 in the comments below to show your turtle love!!If you haven't ...
09/29/2020

Celebrating 🐢 with this beautiful sea turtle!! Drop a 🐢 in the comments below to show your turtle love!!

If you haven't already go check out our merch line at shop.spreadshirt.com/save-our-seas/ or click the link in our bio to help save our worlds oceans. 30% of all profit from sales goes towards the Coral Reef Alliance and The Ocean Cleanup!!!

Researchers with the Census of Marine Zooplankton first discovered the squidworm in 2007 during a cruise in a remotely o...
09/29/2020

Researchers with the Census of Marine Zooplankton first discovered the squidworm in 2007 during a cruise in a remotely operated vehicle some 1.8 miles underwater. The funky-looking fish is named for the 10 appendages protruding from its head, which look like tentacles. The squidworm uses these to collect debris falling from the open waters above, known as "marine snow."
If you haven't already go check out our merch line at shop.spreadshirt.com/save-our-seas/ or click the link in our bio to help save our worlds oceans. 30% of all profit from sales goes towards the Coral Reef Alliance and The Ocean Cleanup!!!

A close relative of coral and jellyfish, anemones are stinging polyps that spend most of their time attached to rocks on...
09/28/2020

A close relative of coral and jellyfish, anemones are stinging polyps that spend most of their time attached to rocks on the sea bottom or on coral reefs waiting for fish to pass close enough to get ensnared in their venom-filled tentacles.
Their bodies are composed of an adhesive pedal disc, or foot, a cylindrical body, and an array of tentacles surrounding a central mouth. The tentacles are triggered by the slightest touch, firing a harpoon-like filament into their victim and injecting a paralyzing neurotoxin. The helpless prey is then guided into the mouth by the tentacles.
There are more than 1,000 sea anemone species found throughout the world’s oceans at various depths, although the largest and most varied occur in coastal tropical waters. They run the full spectrum of colors and can be as small as half an inch or as large as 6 feet across.

If you haven't already go check out our merch line at  shop.spreadshirt.com/save-our-seas/ or click the link in our bio ...
09/26/2020

If you haven't already go check out our merch line at shop.spreadshirt.com/save-our-seas/ or click the link in our bio to help save our worlds oceans. 30% of all profit from sales goes towards the Coral Reef Alliance and The Ocean Cleanup!!!

Usually seen nestled into burrows around coral reefs, the ribbon eel (sometimes called the leaf-nosed moray eel) lives i...
09/25/2020

Usually seen nestled into burrows around coral reefs, the ribbon eel (sometimes called the leaf-nosed moray eel) lives in Indonesian waters from East Africa, to southern Japan, Australia, and French Polynesia. The juveniles start out black, with a pale yellow strip along the fins, and as they grow, transitions to a bright blue and yellow coloring. These eels are considered "protrandic hermaphrodites," meaning they change s*x from male to female several times throughout their lives.

Manta rays—highly intelligent and highly threatened—are the largest rays in the world.The sea creatures live in tropical...
09/25/2020

Manta rays—highly intelligent and highly threatened—are the largest rays in the world.

The sea creatures live in tropical, subtropical, and temperate ocean waters across the globe. “Manta” means blanket or cloak in Spanish, describing the look of the animals’ large, flat, diamond-shaped bodies, which are characterized by triangular pectoral fins. Manta rays have two horn-shaped fins protruding from the front of their heads, which has also given them the nickname “devil fish.”

For decades, scientists thought there was just one species of manta ray. In 2008, researchers discovered that there are actually two distinct species: the reef manta ray, which tends to live along coastlines in the Indo-Pacific, and the giant oceanic manta ray, which lives in all the world’s major oceans, spending most of its life far from land.

Go to shop.spreadshirt.com/save-our-seas/ or click the link in our bio to help save our worlds oceans. 30% of all profit from sales goes towards the Coral Reef Alliance and The Ocean Cleanup!!!

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