Wow, pretty interesting photos guys.
Here are more weird deep-sea dwellers:
The Umbrellamouth GulperThe Umbrellamouth Gulper throws wide its loosely hinged jaws and balloons out its mouth to engulf hapless fishes, which are deposited in the pouchlike lower jaw (hence its common name, pelican eel). Though a fearsome-looking creature, the pelican eel is only two feet long, including the whiplike tail. It lives in all the world's oceans at depths exceeding 6,500 feet.
Fangtooth/OrgefishIt's not hard to see why the common name of Anoplogaster cornuta is "fangtooth." (It has also been dubbed "ogrefish.")In this species, juveniles differ so strikingly from adults that it took 50 years for fish biologists to realize that Anoplogaster and a genus they were calling Caulolepsis were one and the same animal, just of different ages. Fangtooths (or should we say "fangteeth"?) are found in tropical and temperate waters down to 16,000 feet.
Stone Crab This large deep-sea crab belongs in a group of crabs known as anomurans, which includes the hermit crabs. Some scientists suggest hermit crabs evolved from crabs such as these. It has long protective spikes and large crushing claws, presumably for crushing other crabs and shellfish. It has a soft tail held up under its body, showing its relations to the soft-bodied hermit crabs. Only eight legs are well developed, a small fifth pair is held up with the tail under the body. This specimen is a male, recognised by the genital opening at the base of the last arm pair. Although it looks very bright and colourful to us, the red colour probably helps hide it in the deep sea. In low light levels, red looks black, so it would blend in well in the darkness. Its eyes are very small; in some deep-sea crabs they have lost their eyesight completely.