Also known as anglerfish, these fish walk across the bottom (they can swim....sort of). When they're hungry they stand perfectly still and use a little lure to attract little fish and shrimp close enough so they can gulp them down.
This hairy frogfish has a pretty big lure:
In most places I've been diving, frogfish sightings are pretty rare, in Lembeh there were lots around.
Continue reading "Frogfish" »
This is one of the creatures this area is famous for.They live on sea fans and are between a quarter inch and three-quarters of an inch big. They also tend to be found between 60-100 feet deep, so there isn't much time either. Very frustrating and difficult to photograph (they shy away from lights).
This is my best shot of the trip:
To get two in one shot AND have them both looking my way AND get them in focus (remember, they're half an inch big!) was a thrill.
Continue reading "Pygmy Seahorses" »
After a couple of days of muck diving, its nice to get back to the beautiful walls and reefs of the Wakatobi archipelago. The incredible thing about the muck diving is that you become overwhelmed by the sheer frequency and diversity of the animal encounters. Its relatively high intensity diving. In comparison, the reef diving here is pretty relaxed, but offers fascinating critter opportunities as well:
Lots of clownfish around
This crinoid shrimp is a great example of natural camouflage abilities
Continue reading "Back to the pretty reefs" »
Some more pics from Butan:
Napoleon Snake Eel
Here is one swimming about
Fire Urchin. Beautiful, but a painful venom on the spines.
Continue reading "More Muck" »
In scuba parlance, muck diving is generally defined as having three components:
- Sandy/silty bottom
- A nearby freshwater source (which makes visibility poor)
- Human influence
So goodbye pretty reefs (for a couple of days), hello junk-strewn piers, harbors and beaches. Why dive this environment?.....because despite their general ickiness, they are filled with some of the most interesting and diverse marine life in the world (as I will hopefully show here).
juvenile boxfish (the size of your pinky fingernail)
The art of camouflage (razorfish)
Continue reading "Muck Diving" »
Okay, we're finally swimmin! Just a warning, I haven't looked most of these creatures up yet, so most will be unnamed. Just pics.
Critters after the jump:
Continue reading "Underwater World" »