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Giant Cuttlefish, dubbed 'masters of disguise', bred in the UK(1/3)

2018-09-28 14:47:14 Ecns.cn Editor :Yao Lan
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Giant Cuttlefish (Sepia apama) have been successfully bred in the UK for the first time at the Sealife Marine Development Centre in Weymouth in Dorset. Britain has its first ever shoal of giant cuttlefish after an aquarium successfully hatched and reared 18 babies. The unusual and spectacular species, which have been dubbed the marine world\'s \'masters of disguise\', are native to the southern coast of Australia, where the can grow to over 2 ft in length, and have never been on display in the UK before. (Photo/VCG)

Giant Cuttlefish (Sepia apama) have been successfully bred in the UK for the first time at the Sealife Marine Development Centre in Weymouth in Dorset. Britain has its first ever shoal of giant cuttlefish after an aquarium successfully hatched and reared 18 babies. The unusual and spectacular species, which have been dubbed the marine world's 'masters of disguise', are native to the southern coast of Australia, where the can grow to over 2 ft in length, and have never been on display in the UK before. (Photo/VCG)

Giant Cuttlefish (Sepia apama) have been successfully bred in the UK for the first time at the Sealife Marine Development Centre in Weymouth in Dorset. Britain has its first ever shoal of giant cuttlefish after an aquarium successfully hatched and reared 18 babies. The unusual and spectacular species, which have been dubbed the marine world\'s \'masters of disguise\', are native to the southern coast of Australia, where the can grow to over 2 ft in length, and have never been on display in the UK before. (Photo/VCG)

Giant Cuttlefish (Sepia apama) have been successfully bred in the UK for the first time at the Sealife Marine Development Centre in Weymouth in Dorset. Britain has its first ever shoal of giant cuttlefish after an aquarium successfully hatched and reared 18 babies. The unusual and spectacular species, which have been dubbed the marine world's 'masters of disguise', are native to the southern coast of Australia, where the can grow to over 2 ft in length, and have never been on display in the UK before. (Photo/VCG)

Giant Cuttlefish (Sepia apama) have been successfully bred in the UK for the first time at the Sealife Marine Development Centre in Weymouth in Dorset. Britain has its first ever shoal of giant cuttlefish after an aquarium successfully hatched and reared 18 babies. The unusual and spectacular species, which have been dubbed the marine world\'s \'masters of disguise\', are native to the southern coast of Australia, where the can grow to over 2 ft in length, and have never been on display in the UK before. (Photo/VCG)

Giant Cuttlefish (Sepia apama) have been successfully bred in the UK for the first time at the Sealife Marine Development Centre in Weymouth in Dorset. Britain has its first ever shoal of giant cuttlefish after an aquarium successfully hatched and reared 18 babies. The unusual and spectacular species, which have been dubbed the marine world's 'masters of disguise', are native to the southern coast of Australia, where the can grow to over 2 ft in length, and have never been on display in the UK before. (Photo/VCG)

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