Green Moray Eel - Gymnothorax funebris
The green moray is actually brown! The yellow tint of the mucus that covers its body, in combination with the drab background color, gives the fish its namesake green color
The moray’s muscular, scaleless body is laterally compressed (flattened side to side).
The moray eel is considered a “true” eel, classified in the Order Anguilliformes. Like other true eels, the moray’s dorsal fin begins just behind its head, extends along the length of its body and is fused with the caudal (tail) and anal fins. The moray eel also lacks both pelvic and pectoral fins.
With long, scaleless bodies, green moray eels are often feared and mistaken for sea serpents.
Green morays are sedentary predators with strong teeth. Rather than hunting for food, they wait until food comes to them.
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