| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| A large mammal with a blowhole on their head for breathing, as well as blubber or insulation. | Whale | 100%
|
| A large marine mammal with large tusks and many bristles around their mouth. | Walrus | 65%
|
| The largest existing fish species that we know of. They consume large amounts of plankton by sucking water into their large mouths. | Whale Shark | 41%
|
| A family of brightly colored marine fish that are carnivorous and feed on invertebrates. | Wrasse | 18%
|
| A speedy game fish with verticals blue stripes across its body, which rapidly fade when they die. | Wahoo | 12%
|
| They are named for their front teeth that are similar to that of a canine, which it uses to feed on shellfishes. | Wolffish | 12%
|
| A species of loach found across Europe and parts of Asia, which gets its name based on is high activity from barometric pressure changes during thunderstorms. | Weatherfish | 6%
|
| A subgenus of the species above that is considered as one of the most prestigious fish for the Māori people. | Whapuku | 6%
|
| Also known as the merling, this fish was considered cheap and for poor people and pets until the 20th century. | Whiting | 6%
|
| They are deep-water fish that are named for how they inhabit caves and shipwrecks at the bottom of the ocean. | Wreckfish | 6%
|
| They are extremely venomous, and the poison glands on their spines can inflict painful (or even dangerous) wounds. | Waspfish | 0%
|
| Also known as the North American manatee, this marine mammal has no natural predators and can withstand large changes in salinity. | West Indian Manatee | 0%
|
| A deep sea ambush predator that is able to swallow large prey whole. It is long and eel-like, with a light organ at the end of its tail. | Whiptail Gulper | 0%
|
| This shrimp is found in the Atlantic Coast and Gulf of Mexico. It was part of the earliest shrimp fishery in the United States. | White Shrimp | 0%
|
| A name given to a family of carpet sharks with symmetrical patterns that dwell on the ocean floor. In Australia, their skin is used to make leather. | Wobbegong | 0%
|
| An eel-like creature with little to nothing known about their territoriality or reproductive biology. | Wrymouth | 0%
|