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The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

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Blue cod prey on sea urchins and abalone

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Shrimp

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Great white sharks come here to hunt fur seals

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Small sand cones

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Cha Island Partridge

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Brown skuas pick up carrion and steal eggs from young birds and their kind

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Blue penguins

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

White-faced tern

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Black shear water stork

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

New Zealand albatross nests and fishes

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Starfish break the abalone off the stone, and the blue cod takes the opportunity to snatch the abalone.

The pilot whale is five meters long, belongs to dolphins, preys on arrow squid, sleeps upright, and is easy to run aground.

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Fin sharks prey on cod

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Banks Peninsula

black swan

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

The paradise duck nests in a tree hole to lay eggs, and the parents take the ducklings to survive.

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Purple waterfowl males are responsible for hatching, and young birds have iconic big feet and degenerate small wings.

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Hearst's Dolphin, the smallest dolphin in the world, weighs only fifty kilograms and is 1.5 meters long.

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Whitefin penguins, built their nests in a semi-mountain cave that is difficult to climb.

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Spotted cormorant

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

As young, the albacore eels swim backwards from the sea to the river, growing into the world's largest eel, weighing up to 20 kilograms, and then returning to the sea to mate and breed, and can survive dehydrated.

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Basking sharks, five meters long and weighing five tons, are known as the most gentle sharks, feeding on plankton and living in groups.

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Eleven-footed starfish try to hunt scallops.

Whisker sharks

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Fur seals prey on octopuses.

Spoonbills

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Fiordland National Park

Bottlenose dolphins, four meters long, prey on spotted fish

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden
The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

mullet

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Maori penguins with the iconic yellow crowned feathers

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Black coral

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Lamprey shark

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

sea spider

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

skink

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Carnivorous parrot

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Buzzard

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Snake starfish clear plankton from the surface of polyps

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Wax sea squirt

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

Hagfish

The Chatham Islands in the Blue Back Garden

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