The Unimaginable Predator
Let’s begin its description with its development. The Death Star could easily sprout around fifty appendages and its growth can extend beyond the size of a hubcap. If you had to look closely at this thing, you might notice the tiny pincers which coat its many arms’ surface, which clamp closed whenever they bump into unsuspecting prey. While the Death Star might owe its life to krill’s bowel movements, that does not stop it from feeding on the tiny fellows. And that is not even the oddest part of the sinister Sunstar…
When The Fish Are Away…
Fish are obviously the most competitive and dominant predators inside our planet’s oceans, but not in this one. The Death Star is just one incredible difference in the hierarchy witnessed within Antarctica. You can bet that the majority of fish will stay away from the inhospitably cold temperatures of the South Pole. There is just a small number of fish types that could brave these chilling waters and live. With less competition from the outside world, the Antarctic Sunstar has become an apex predator.