The picture ,? ? Sea Apple? Sea Apple?, Red Tentacled Sea Apple and ? Saddle-banded Grouper? Scientific name
Cucumariidae ? Pseudocolochirus ? Pseudocolochirus ? Branchiostoma echinodermata
are ovoid with tubular legs. They are filter feeders, eating zooplankton daily, but do not eat large amounts of food and have limited digestive capacity. When feeding, they use their tentacles to grab their prey and bring the captured food into their mouths.
The most brightly colored ones are a pinkish gray. There is also a set of yellow, pink or orange tube feet. The front of the body bears a group of soft, feathery tentacles, varying in color from yellow to crimson, which are used to filter the ingested food. Food is first caught by the tentacles and then delivered to the mouth for consumption. Carnivorous, preferring very tiny live or frozen baits, such as the articulated larvae of the Toyon shrimp and rotifers; can be supplemented with specially designed suspended artificial baits .
Serranidae ? Serranidae Grouper genus ?Epinephelus fish
Below is a picture of the Saddle-banded grouper Epinephelus lanceolatus? , commonly known as the lobster, gentian grouper, ? Fish, fish, fish, fish, deep-sea wild grouper, gunhead grouper, inverted swallow horseshoe crab, mandarin duck chopped meat, purple grouper
It is the largest grouper in the grouper class, so it is also known as the "king of the grouper". It is distributed in the Indo-Pacific region, from the east coast of Africa and the Red Sea in the west to southern Japan in the north and northwestern Australia in the south (except the Persian Gulf). Saddleback grouper can also be found in estuaries. It is found in the waters of northeastern Taiwan. This species can grow to a maximum length of about 2.7 meters and 440 kilograms.
The saddleband grouper usually resides in caves or rock crevices along coral reef areas and feeds on several species of marine life, including small sharks and small turtles.