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  • Baby Lisbeth's brooding anemones (Epiactis lisbethae) cling to their mom on a kelp frond off Vancouver Island, BC, Canada.
    20210320-500_5143.jpg
  • Baby Lisbeth's brooding anemones (Epiactis lisbethae) cling to their mom on a kelp frond off Vancouver Island, BC, Canada.
    20210320-500_5191.jpg
  • A baby seahorse (species unknown) clinging to seagrass (Syringodium filiforme) in The Bahamas.
    20180429-500_7979.jpg
  • A baby Northern seastar or starfish (Asterias vulgaris) feeds on alge on a blade of eelgrass (Zostera marina) off Newfoundland, Canada.
    20190926-500_1225.jpg
  • Baby sea turtle in the open ocean.
    2012_Nov21_ucabo260.jpg
  • Plainfin midshipman (Porichthys notatus) fish eggs under a rock in the intertidal zone on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210627-DSC_7314.jpg
  • Plainfin midshipman (Porichthys notatus) fish eggs under a rock in the intertidal zone on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210627-DSC_7266.jpg
  • Plainfin midshipman (Porichthys notatus) fish eggs under a rock in the intertidal zone on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210627-DSC_7256.jpg
  • A lemon shark (Negaprion brevirostris) pup in a mangrove nursery in The Bahamas.
    20200614-500_1295.jpg
  • Baby Lisbeth's brooding anemones (Epiactis lisbethae) cling to their mom on a kelp frond off Vancouver Island, BC, Canada.
    20210320-500_5181.jpg
  • A baby nurse shark (Ginglymostoma cirratum), or pup, swims in a mangrove forest. The little sharks take advantage of the many places to hide in mangroves or under rocks. Image made in Bimini, Bahamas.
    2013_mar19_Bimini207.jpg
  • A Sunflower seastar (Pycnopodia helianthoides) juvenile feeding on algae growing on eelgrass (Zostera marina) in Port Fidalgo, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA.
    20220626-500_0316.jpg
  • Southern elephant seal (Mirounga leonina) crying, St. Andrews Bay, South Georgia.
    20211129-DSC_7632.jpg
  • A baby lemon shark swimming in the protection provided by mangroves. Lemon sharks depend on mangroves for the survival of the first 5-8 years of their lives. Mangroves are disappearing throughout the world and the fate of the lemon shark is left in the balance. We need to get proper protections for the world's mangroves and then enforce them.
    LemonsAndMangroves02.jpg
  • A humpback whale calf (Megaptera novaeangliae) off Moorea, French Polynesia.
    20210816-500_6246.jpg
  • A young Northern sea star (Asterias vulgaris) on a blade of seagrass (Zostera marina) off Newfoundland, Canada.
    20190926-500_1239.jpg
  • Juvenile nurse shark (Ginglymostoma cirratum) in a mangrove forest, Bimini, Bahamas.
    2013_mar19_Bimini184.jpg
  • A young Galapagos Sea Lion (Zalophus wollebacki) resting on rocks at sunset on North Seymour Island, Galapagos, Ecuador.
    20191208GalapagosTopside273.jpg
  • A tiny, baby seahorse clings to a blade of seagrass.
    BabySeahorses-TheyLikeSeagrass.jpg
  • Baby lemon shark in mangrove forest of Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2013_06_03_HI258.jpg
  • A Sunflower seastar (Pycnopodia helianthoides) juvenile feeding on algae growing on eelgrass (Zostera marina) in Port Fidalgo, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA.
    20220626-500_0306.jpg
  • A juvenile basket star (Gorgonocephalus eucnemis) on red soft coral (Eunephthya rubiformis) in Browning Pass, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210321-500_5438.jpg
  • A juvenile Galapagos Sea Lion (Zalophus wollebacki) resting on rocks at sunset on North Seymour Island, Galapagos, Ecuador.
    20191208GalapagosTopside241.jpg
  • A baby lemon shark swimming in the protection provided by mangroves. Lemon sharks depend on mangroves for the survival of the first 5-8 years of their lives. Mangroves are disappearing throughout the world and the fate of the lemon shark is left in the balance. We need to get proper protections for the world's mangroves and then enforce them.
    LemonSharkStory.jpg
  • A Sunflower seastar (Pycnopodia helianthoides) juvenile feeding on algae growing on kelp in Port Fidalgo, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA.
    20220626-500_0343.jpg
  • A tiny (3cm) remora fish aka shark sucker (Echeneis naucrates) in the Sargasso Sea, Atlantic ocean, International Waters.
    20190803-500_5607.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI0908.jpg
  • Newborn baby southern elephant seal (Mirounga leonina) weaner, Gold Harbour, South Georgia Island.
    20211128-DSC_6046.jpg
  • Baby plainfin midshipman (Porichthys notatus) fish still attached to their yolk sacs hidden under a rock in the intertidal zone, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20220713-DSC_2943.jpg
  • Scientist Monica Cruz braces a baby manatee while veterenarians treat the calf at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico103.jpg
  • Baby lemon sharks have been shown to exhibit distinct, individual personalities. Some even form friendships. Studies have shown the little sharks will spend more social time with certain individuals and can even learn from each other.
    Friends
  • Baby lemon shark under mangrove tree at sunset.
    Storm
  • Baby lemon sharks have been shown to exhibit distinct, individual personalities. Some even form friendships. Lemon sharks depend on mangroves for the survival of the first 5-8 years of their lives. Mangroves are disappearing throughout the world and the fate of the lemon shark is left in the balance. We need to get proper protections for the world's mangroves and then enforce them.
    LemonSharkStory04.jpg
  • A plainfin midshipman (Porichthys notatus) guards and aerates his eggs under a rock in the intertidal zone on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210627-DSC_7183.jpg
  • Juvenile nurse sharks will seek shelter from larger predators in seagrass, mangroves and coral reefs.
    20180628-500_6950sm.jpg
  • A plainfin midshipman (Porichthys notatus) guards and aerates his eggs under a rock in the intertidal zone on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210627-DSC_7087.jpg
  • A plainfin midshipman (Porichthys notatus) guards and aerates his eggs under a rock in the intertidal zone on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210627-DSC_7152.jpg
  • A lemon shark pup (Negaprion brevirostris), only six months old, hunting in the mangrove creek she calls home at dusk in The Bahamas.
    Pup
  • A lemon shark (Negaprion brevirostris) pup in a mangrove nursery in The Bahamas.
    20200614-500_1363.jpg
  • King penguin (Aptenodytes patagonicus) chick portrait, Gold Harbour, South Georgia Island.
    20211128-DSC_6089.jpg
  • A lemon shark is kept in a tank for study by marine biologists.
    LemonSharkStory07.jpg
  • Veterinarian Lesly Cabrias and scientists Kevin Perez and Monica Cruz return an abandoned manatee calf to her pool after treatment at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico107.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI0973.jpg
  • Gentoo penguin (Pygoscelis papua) and chick, New Island, Falkland Islands.
    20211207-DSC_3773.jpg
  • Rockhopper penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome) and chick, Bleaker Island, Falkland Islands
    20211205-DSC_2317.jpg
  • Rockhopper penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome) feeding chick, Bleaker Island, Falkland Islands
    20211205-DSC_2104.jpg
  • Rockhopper penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome) in nest with chick, Bleaker Island, Falkland Islands
    20211205-DSC_1426.jpg
  • Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi) pup swims near the surface off Harbour Island, Bahamas.
    20200609-500_1190.jpg
  • Juvenile coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) and steelhead/rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) take a rest in an eddy of the fast-moving Campbell River, Vancouver Island, BC, Canada.
    20210524-500_8657.jpg
  • Larval Sharptail eel (Myrichthys breviceps) swimming at night in The Bahamas.
    20190228-500_3821.jpg
  • A juvenile nurse shark (Ginglymostoma cirratum) hides under the reef in The Bahamas.
    20171123-DSC_1752.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_09_27LemonShark789.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI1299.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2014_10_16HI715.jpg
  • 2014_10_17HI526print.jpg
  • A tiny, juvenile Caribbean reef squid less than half an inch long.
    2016_03_14_HI560.jpg
  • Lemon sharks depend on mangroves for the survival of the first 5-8 years of their lives. Mangroves are disappearing throughout the world and the fate of the lemon shark is left in the balance. We need to get proper protections for the world's mangroves and then enforce them.
    2015_11_30HI0977.jpg
  • Lemon sharks depend on mangroves for the survival of the first 5-8 years of their lives. Mangroves are disappearing throughout the world and the fate of the lemon shark is left in the balance. We need to get proper protections for the world's mangroves and then enforce them.
    LemonsAndMangroves22.jpg
  • Embryonic plainfin midshipman fish (Porichthys notatus) still attached to their yolk sacs on Vancouver Island, BC, Canada.
    20220713-DSC_2943.jpg
  • Gentoo penguin (Pygoscelis papua) and chick, New Island, Falkland Islands.
    20211207-DSC_3877.jpg
  • Gentoo penguin (Pygoscelis papua) feeding chick, New Island, Falkland Islands.
    20211207-DSC_3809.jpg
  • Gentoo penguin (Pygoscelis papua) with chick on nest, Steeple Jason, Falkland Islands
    20211206-DSC_2898.jpg
  • Black-browed Albatross (Thalassarche melanophrys) sitting on nest with a hatching egg, Steeple Jason Island, Falkland Islands
    20211206-DSC_2686.jpg
  • Rockhopper penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome) and chick, Bleaker Island, Falkland Islands
    20211205-DSC_2315.jpg
  • Rockhopper penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome) in nest with chick, Bleaker Island, Falkland Islands
    20211205-DSC_2072.jpg
  • Juvenile coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) takes a rest in an eddy of the fast-moving Campbell River, Vancouver Island, BC, Canada.
    20210524-500_8540.jpg
  • A juvenile coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) takes a rest in an eddy of the fast-moving Campbell River, Vancouver Island, BC, Canada.
    20210524-500_8450.jpg
  • Portrait of a juvenile yelloweye rockfish (Sebastes ruberrimus) off Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210507-500_7105.jpg
  • A young Northern sea star (Asterias vulgaris) on a blade of kelp off Newfoundland, Canada.
    20190926-500_1190.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI1122.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) are social animals, proven to form friendships. Lemon shark pups spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2014_10_17HI265-2.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI1048.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI0952.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI0855.jpg
  • Researchers Ian Bouyoucos and Cam Raguse test whether a lemon shark pup (Negaprion brevirostris) had been previously tagged at the Cape Eleuthera Insitute in The Bahamas. Lemon shark pups spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development.
    2015_09_09_CEI308.jpg
  • A lemon shark acclimatizes to her temporary home inside a large tank at the Cape Eleuthera Institute in The Bahamas.
    2015_11_30HI397.jpg
  • Gentoo penguin (Pygoscelis papua) chick, New Island, Falkland Islands.
    20211207-DSC_3851.jpg
  • Gentoo penguin (Pygoscelis papua) with chick on nest, Steeple Jason, Falkland Islands
    20211206-DSC_3017.jpg
  • Scientists and veterenarians return an abandoned manatee calf to her pool after treatment at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico109.jpg
  • A young Northern sea star (Asterias vulgaris) on a blade of kelp off Newfoundland, Canada.
    20190926-500_1248.jpg
  • A young Northern sea star (Asterias vulgaris) on a blade of seagrass (Zostera marina) off Newfoundland, Canada.
    20190926-500_1182.jpg
  • Larval Sharptail eel (Myrichthys breviceps) swimming at night in The Bahamas.
    20190228-500_3830.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_05_16_HI0106.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_09_28LemonShark099.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2014_10_17HI650.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2014_10_17HI526.jpg
  • A lemon shark pup swimming among mangrove roots and mangrove snapper in a tiny creek on Eleuthera Island.
    2014_10_17HI473.jpg
  • Lemon sharks depend on mangroves for the survival of the first 5-8 years of their lives. Mangroves are disappearing throughout the world and the fate of the lemon shark is left in the balance. We need to get proper protections for the world's mangroves and then enforce them.
    2015_09_09_CEI526.jpg
  • Lemon shark pup swimming through green leaves of a Mangrove forest.
    2014_10_17HI535.jpg
  • Lemon sharks depend on mangroves for the survival of the first 5-8 years of their lives. Mangroves are disappearing throughout the world and the fate of the lemon shark is left in the balance. We need to get proper protections for the world's mangroves and then enforce them.
    LemonsAndMangroves23.jpg
  • Rockhopper penguin (Eudyptes chrysocome) in nest with chick, Bleaker Island, Falkland Islands
    20211205-DSC_1389.jpg
  • Lemon shark pups (Negaprion brevirostris) spend the first 5-8 years of their life in mangrove forests. The tangle of roots provides protection from predators like large sharks and is full of potential prey like juvenile fish and crabs. Lemon sharks are the first species of shark proven to practice natal philopatry where the mother will return to the same area she was born in to give birth. Mangroves are being lost at unsustainable rates thanks to coastal development. Image made on Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2016_02_22HI725.jpg
  • Dayna Mar Gomez, a marine scientist with the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico, feeds Moana, the baby Manatee. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico114.jpg
  • Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) juvenile, hiding in eelgrass (Zostera marina) off Newfoundland, Canada
    20190926-500_0834.jpg
  • Red mangrove (Rhizophora mangle) habitat with a juvenile great barracuda (Sphyraena barracuda) in The Bahamas.
    20200628-500_1775.jpg
  • A baby lemon shark in shallow water.
    2014_06_21HI060.jpg
  • A young great barracuda (Sphyraena barracuda) waits in ambush for small fish in the mangroves. Image made in The Bahamas.
    20200706-500_1853.jpg
  • A young great barracuda (Sphyraena barracuda) waits in ambush for small fish in the mangroves. Image made in The Bahamas.
    20200706-500_2030.jpg
  • A young great barracuda (Sphyraena barracuda) waits in ambush for small fish in the mangroves. Image made in The Bahamas.
    20200706-500_2064.jpg
  • Dayna Mar Gomez, a marine scientist with the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico, feeds Moana, the baby Manatee. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico114.jpg
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