Things Found In The Ocean with D
Ocean mammal; often seen swimming in pods.
Sadly, you can find dead fish floating in seas.
People diving in the ocean—definitely found there.
Deep ocean zones are completely dark.
Ocean debris/trash is unfortunately common.
Sadly, corpses do sink and can be found in oceans
A small shark commonly found in oceans.
Human remains can end up in the sea in reality
A small sea boat called a dory is used offshore.
Wood washed into and floating on the sea surface
Fish, whales etc. die and their bodies are in seas
Illegal cargo sometimes dumped or smuggled by sea
Gemstones can be in sunken treasure on seafloors
A dump of trash can be sunk or dumped at sea.
Animal dung can end up floating or sinking in oceans.
Sadly, human or animal corpses are found in oceans.
Dragonfish are real deep‑sea bioluminescent fishes.
Dead organic matter litters the seafloor everywhere.
Marine fossils and dino bones can be in seabeds.
Dust settles into oceans from air and rivers.
A dinghy is a small boat often used at sea.
Coins like dimes are common in shipwrecks and seas.
Dragon fish spelling variant, same deep‑sea creature.
Dogfish are small sharks common in many oceans.
Dead coral forms big parts of many reefs’ structure.
Structure where boats tie up; many harbors meet the ocean.
Sadly, drowned human bodies can be in the sea.
Disposable diapers often pollute seas as litter.
Dogfish are small sharks living in the ocean.
Pollution makes ocean water dirty in many places.
Detritus is dead organic matter sinking in seas.
Deep sea divers explore underwater ocean environments.
Dollar bills and coins can sink as ocean treasure.
Generic but fits: trash often floats in the ocean.
Dimes can be lost overboard, lying on seabeds.
Plastic dolls can become marine debris pollution.
Deep sea creatures live in the darkest ocean zones.
Dead whales sink and form “whale fall” ecosystems.
A dorsal fin is part of many ocean animals.
- dory fish
Shipwrecks can have doors lying on the seabed.
Coins and dollar bills can sink to the seafloor.
Small colorful reef fish living in tropical seas.
Back fins of fish and dolphins, vital for swimming.
Plates and cups often end up as sunken trash.
Microscopic algae; huge part of marine plankton.
The deep parts of the sea, far below surface.
Very deep ocean valleys like Mariana Trench.
Colorful reef fish, popular in marine aquariums.
Sewer outlets can drain water into the ocean.
Name for venomous rays or octopus; dangerous sea life.
The vertical distance from surface to seafloor.
Person exploring underwater with scuba gear.
Organic remains sinking and decomposing on seabed.
Generic but fine: any harmful fish in the ocean.
Plastic drink bottles often pollute oceans.
Drums can be dumped or lost as underwater debris.
Tragically, people can drown in the ocean.
Underwater drones/ROVs explore and film the sea.
Ship doors and hatches end up on wrecks.
Generic, but a dark-colored fish can live in sea.
Dogfish sharks are common small ocean sharks.
Dead marine plants and algae litter the seafloor.
Underwater dark caves exist in many oceans.
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