Invertebrates - marine
Of the world’s c. 1.8 million described species, around 97 percent are invertebrates. Invertebrates were the first animals to evolve on earth, and exhibit a staggering level of diversity, from the relatively simple, such as the common jellyfish, to the much more complex arthropods and molluscs, such as the giant octopus. Besides the lack of a backbone, members of this large, informal group do not have bony skeletons or true jaws. Invertebrates are particularly abundant in the world’s oceans, where they are subject to an increasing variety of threats, including pollution, climate change, over-collection, habitat degradation and competition with invasive species.
Explore ARKive for videos and images of endangered invertebrates, and learn about invertebrate conservation, biology and more in our species fact-files.
Click on the first letter of the scientific name.
Species 1 - 19 of 19
-
Sand-hoppers are so called because of their ability to leap when disturbed; they do so by tucking in the tail, and rapidly flicking it out... More
5 Images
1 Video
-
Information on Trachyphyllia geoffroyi is currently being researched and written and will appear here shortly... More
2 Images
0 videos
-
The southern giant clam is one of the largest of the ‘giant clams’, reaching up to an incredible 60 cm in length. The species is also known... More
7 Images
1 Video
-
This enormous shellfish is the largest species of bivalve mollusc in the fossil record, and the heaviest of all the living molluscs. Like... More
14 Images
3 Videos
-
At less than a third of the size of the true giant clam (Tridacna gigas), the small giant clam (Tridacna maxima) deserves its name. As an... More
10 Images
1 Video
-
The fluted clam (Tridacna squamosa), also known as the scaled clam, can be identified by the large, leaf-like fluted scales on its shell... More
17 Images
1 Video
-
The European or spotted cowrie is a marine mollusc that has an egg-shaped glossy shell featuring many transverse ridges with a long, narrow... More
7 Images
2 Videos
-
An uncommon species of the Galápagos, Floreana coral is a scleractinian coral, meaning that it is a ‘hard’ coral with a limestone skeleton... More
2 Images
0 videos
-
Unlike most corals, it is not colourful polyps that make organ pipe corals attractive, but instead, their dark red coloured skeleton. The... More
7 Images
1 Video
-
Unlike most corals, it is not colourful polyps that make organ pipe corals attractive, but instead, their dark red coloured skeleton. The... More
2 Images
1 Video
-
Like other colony-forming corals, Turbinaria bifrons colonies are composed of numerous small polyps, which are soft-bodied animals, related... More
1 Image
0 videos
-
Information on Turbinaria heronensis is currently being researched and written and will appear here shortly... More
2 Images
0 videos
-
Turbinaria mesenterina is a reef-building coral, its colonies forming thin, overlapping, grey-green or grey-brown plates. The plates... More
4 Images
0 videos
-
Information on Turbinaria patula is currently being researched and written and will appear here shortly... More
1 Image
0 videos
-
The reef-building coral Turbinaria peltata forms colonies of flat, overlapping plates and occasionally vertical columns. A single colony... More
2 Images
2 Videos
-
Information on Turbinaria radicalis is currently being researched and written and will appear here shortly... More
1 Image
0 videos
-
Turbinaria reniformis is a reef-building coral that forms colonies of mostly horizontal, overlapping plates that can grow over one metre in... More
7 Images
2 Videos
-
Information on Turbinaria stellulata is currently being researched and written and will appear here shortly... More
3 Images
0 videos
-
This small shrimp is whitish overall with some internal red pigment cells (chromatophores). The eyes are also pigmented and are directed... More
4 Images
0 videos
Species 1 - 19 of 19