
Dead Cuttlefish and Beach Mysteries: What Washes Ashore on Koh Rong Sanloem
This morning's sunrise over Koh Rong Sanloem painted the bay in those perfect golden hues that make you forget about equipment failures and client work stress. The kind of light that frames the jungle-covered hills in soft focus while gentle waves roll onto sand that's actually clean enough to walk barefoot. Perfect conditions for discovering the weird stuff that washes ashore overnight.
What looked like a fish in distress turned into a lesson about marine ecosystems and the cycle of life that plays out constantly on these Cambodian beaches.
The Rescue Mission That Wasn't
Walking along the waterline, I spotted what appeared to be something splashing frantically in a small tidal pool trapped between sand formations. Natural instinct kicked in—animal in distress needs help. Started scanning the beach for a container, maybe a discarded bucket or plastic bottle I could use for an impromptu rescue operation.

Found a suitable container and approached the struggling creature, ready to play marine life hero for the morning. That's when closer inspection revealed the harsh reality: this cuttlefish was very much dead, and the splashing motion came from small fish picking at the floating carcass.
The rescue mission became a nature observation session instead. Sometimes the ocean's honesty hits you directly—death feeds life, and every creature plays multiple roles in the ecosystem whether they're swimming or serving as someone else's breakfast.

Cuttlefish Anatomy 101: Beach Breakfast Edition
Never seen a dead cuttlefish up close before this morning. The structure is fascinating and alien simultaneously. That oval bone formation creates the rigid internal framework that supports what must be an incredibly flexible body when alive. The texture suggests something between jellyfish and squid, which makes sense given they're cephalopod cousins.
Multiple holes punctured throughout the body showed where opportunistic fish had been feeding, turning the carcass into a floating buffet. Nature's recycling program operates efficiently here—nothing goes to waste when the tide brings in protein sources.
The cuttlebone itself looked like something from a science fiction movie. Smooth white calcium carbonate structure designed to control buoyancy in living animals, now just serving as evidence of what lives in these waters beyond my usual swimming depth.

The Mysterious Black Insect
Found something else entirely while exploring the morning's tide deposits: a black insect with antennae so long they probably created daily navigation challenges when the thing was alive. Can't imagine the evolutionary pressure that led to sensory equipment that dramatically oversized relative to body mass.
Those antennae stretched easily twice the body length, suggesting this creature relied heavily on chemical detection or air current analysis for survival. Living with equipment that sensitive must have been simultaneously advantageous and exhausting—picking up every environmental signal within a massive radius.
Where did this thing come from? The jungle canopy? Another island entirely? Did it fly here voluntarily or get swept up in weather patterns beyond its control? Beach forensics only tells you so much about how creatures end up where they shouldn't be.

The Larger Cuttlefish Discovery
Later in the walk, discovered another cuttlefish specimen in better preservation condition. This one showed the complete body structure before scavenger fish had access to it. The size suggested these aren't small creatures when alive—probably substantial enough to be meaningful predators in their own right.
The skin texture, even in death, hinted at the camouflage capabilities these animals possess when functioning. Patterns and coloration that could probably shift to match surroundings, making them nearly invisible to both prey and larger predators.
Two cuttlefish discoveries in one morning walk suggests these creatures live in significant numbers in the waters around Koh Rong Sanloem. Every day I swim here with goggles, looking for interesting marine life, but I've never spotted a living cuttlefish. They probably inhabit deeper water near the coral formations rather than the shallow sandy areas where I usually explore.
The Hunt for Living Cuttlefish
This becomes my new mission: spot a live cuttlefish in its natural habitat. The beach evidence proves they're here in numbers, but my swimming exploration hasn't reached their preferred depth zones yet. Need to venture toward the coral areas instead of staying in the comfortable shallow zones.
Swimming with purpose changes the entire experience. Instead of just cooling off or getting exercise, you're actively hunting for specific wildlife encounters. The search itself becomes the adventure, even when the target remains elusive.

Beach Ecosystem Insights
These morning discoveries remind you that Koh Rong Sanloem functions as a complete ecosystem, not just a tropical paradise backdrop for social media content. The beach serves as nature's morgue and recycling center simultaneously, processing whatever the ocean delivers overnight.
Every sunrise reveals new evidence of the marine life complexity that exists beyond swimming depth. Dead creatures tell stories about living populations, feeding patterns, seasonal movements, and the constant life-and-death dynamics playing out beneath the surface.
The Perfect Morning Context
All this marine biology education unfolded against the backdrop of another perfect Cambodian sunrise, with calm waters reflecting jungle silhouettes and enough light to properly photograph these unusual discoveries. The contrast between scenic beauty and biological reality creates the authentic island experience that goes deeper than postcard aesthetics.
Day 28 of seven months. Dead cuttlefish, mysterious insects, and the ongoing hunt for living marine encounters.
What's the weirdest marine life you've discovered washed ashore? Any tips for spotting cuttlefish in their natural habitat?
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