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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