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The green moray eel is a solitary and nocturnal species and is most often observed to stay within the confines of underwater caves and holes among reefs during the day with only the heads being present outside of the openings at times.
Green morays are nocturnal predators with poor eyesight that primarily use their sense of smell to hunt for fish, squid, octopuses, crabs and occasionally other eels. Green morays have been observed eating octopuses whole as well as tentacle by tentacle.
The green moray eel is a noctural hunter, using its excellent sense of smell to find its food. Their nostrils (called nares) are widely spaced and shaped like tubes. As water passes through the tube they pick up scents - the longer the tube the greater the opportunity to pick up faint smells. GREEN MORAY EEL GYMNOTHORAX PRASINUS DID YOU KNOW?
The green moray eel eats shrimp, fish, crab, and cephalopods like octopus. Range & Habitat: In the Gulf of Mexico, western Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea, the green moray eel lives along rocky shorelines, coral reef communities, seagrass beds, mud bottoms and creeks.
life history of the largest moray eel species in the Caribbean region, the green moray eel (Gymnotho-rax funebris). Sixteen eels were captured from the mangrove fringe in multiple bays on St. Croix, USVI, implanted with coded acoustic transmitters, and their movements were tracked for up to 11 months using
The green moray (Gymnothorax funebris) is a moray eel of the family Muraenidae, found in the western Atlantic Ocean from Long Island, New York, Bermuda, and the northern Gulf of Mexico to Brazil, at depths down to 40 metres (130 ft). Its length is up to 2.5 metres (8.2 ft).
Gymnothorax funebris, green moray eels, can be found in the western Atlantic Ocean, including the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea. Typically, these moray eels range as far north as New Jersey and as far south as Brazil.