Things Found In The Ocean with L
A common marine crustacean—lives in oceans.
Sadly, litter can be found floating in oceans.
A marine fish with venomous spines on reefs.
Same fish; a venomous reef species in seas.
Plural is fine—ocean-dwelling crustaceans.
Small fish swim in the ocean—this counts!
Tree leaves can drift and float in the sea.
Undersea volcanoes can create lava in oceans.
Some leech species are marine parasites.
An eel-like fish; some live in the ocean.
Floating logs can be found out at sea.
Single leaves can wash into the ocean.
Sunken lost treasure is a classic ocean find.
Sunlight and bioluminescent light penetrate oceans.
Shipwreck loot and treasure rest on seafloors.
Marine leeches can parasitize ocean animals.
Water is liquid; oceans are giant liquid bodies.
Marine mammal hunting in Antarctic seas.
Ocean-dwelling requiem shark, often near reefs.
Sedimentary rock; forms seabeds and seamounts.
Spotted shark species found in Pacific coasts.
Very generic, but big fish do swim in oceans.
Marine snail clinging to rocks in intertidal zones.
Some lichens grow on coastal rocks by the sea.
Floating driftwood logs often found in the ocean.
Coins can fall overboard and sink to seafloor.
Broad, but many lost items end up in the ocean.
Wrecked or sunken ships rest on ocean floors.
Many marine animals have larval stages in ocean.
Plural of limpet, common on rocky marine shores.
Lead weights, sinkers, and debris sink in oceans.
Super generic, but live fish definitely in oceans.
Many marine animals have larvae drifting as plankton.
Common name for spotted marine fish species.
“Ling” is a marine cod-like fish in the North Atlantic.
Limes can be cargo or trash floating in the sea.
Emergency boats carried on large ocean ships.
Rescue boat used on ships and oil rigs at sea.
Lamps can be ship equipment or seafloor debris.
- Lion seal
Jawless eel‑like fish living in oceans and rivers.
Animal limbs can be in the water or on seabeds.
Shallow coastal water body often connected to sea.
Very common ocean pollution item, sadly realistic.
Lungfish can enter brackish/near‑coastal waters.
Fishing lines and mooring lines are common at sea.
Legs from animals or wreck victims can be present.
Bioluminescent deep‑sea fish with light organs.
Coastal tower guiding ships over the ocean.
Jewelry pendant; many sink with ships to seabeds.
Flotation device; can fall from boats into sea.
Large Antarctic seals; true marine predators.
Ships, submarines, and buoys all use lights.
Messages in bottles can carry letters at sea.
A written letter can be found in a sea bottle.
Bioluminescent deep-sea fish, also “lanternfish”.
Small fish species; many live in the ocean.
Small crabs scuttle on beaches and shallow seas.
Fishing lines, mooring lines, ropes in the ocean.
Bottle and jar lids often end up as ocean trash.
Whales are marine mammals; large ones roam oceans.
Jawless parasitic fish found in marine waters.
People often lose keys while swimming or diving.
Neck lockets can fall into sea from swimmers.
Plastic Lego bricks do end up as ocean trash.
- leather
Fishing lures are classic gear found in oceans.
Padlocks or door locks often end up as sea junk.
Lace clothing or fabric can become marine litter.
Small seashells are very common in the ocean.
Food waste or dropped limes can float in seawater.
Air mattresses/lilos often drift in coastal waters.
Food leftovers and scraps can float as ocean waste.
Leaves can blow into and float on ocean surface.
Volcanic lava rocks form seafloor and shores.
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