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  • Southern stingray (Dasyatis americana) covering herself with sand for camoflauge. Image made off Nassau, Bahamas.
    20171204-DSC_2078.jpg
  • Great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) at the surface at sunset off Bimini in The Bahamas.
    2015_01_29_bimini577.jpg
  • Portrait of False clown anemonefish (Amphiprion ocellaris) in anemone. Kimbe Bay, Papua New Guinea.
    2015_05_04_PNGD8_117.jpg
  • A pink anemonefish (Amphiprion perideraion) looks out from its host Magnificent sea anemone (Heteractis magnifica) with a school of Chevron barracuda (Sphyraena putnamiae) and a scuba diver in the background. Kimbe Bay, Papua New Guinea
    2015_05_04_PNGD7_0016.jpg
  • Skeleton shrimps (Caprella sp) covering fan coral in Bunaken National Park, North Sulawesi, Indonesia, Pacific Ocean
    20240419-_DSC2370.jpg
  • Skeleton shrimps (Caprella sp) covering fan coral in Bunaken National Park, North Sulawesi, Indonesia, Pacific Ocean
    20240419-_DSC2380.jpg
  • Even after seagrass blades die they are still contributing to the ecosystem, here providing cover for a small blenny.
    20181002-500_5793.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003309.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003250.jpg
  • Extreme close-up of a vermillion star (Mediaster aequalis) and the plates and gills that cover their skin. Image made off Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210503-500_6965.jpg
  • Extreme close-up of a vermillion star (Mediaster aequalis) and the plates and gills that cover their skin. Image made off Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210503-500_6822.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003535.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003534.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003469.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003458.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003456.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003455.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003413.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003364.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003297.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003273.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003255.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003236.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003242.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003231.jpg
  • A lingcod (Ophiodon elongatus) rests under the cover of kelp in Nanoose Bay, Vancounver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20200928-500_2577.jpg
  • Extreme close-up of a vermillion star (Mediaster aequalis) and the plates and gills that cover their skin. Image made off Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210520-500_8337.jpg
  • Extreme close-up of a vermillion star (Mediaster aequalis) and the plates and gills that cover their skin. Image made off Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210503-500_6824.jpg
  • A lingcod (Ophiodon elongatus) rests under the cover of kelp in Nanoose Bay, Vancounver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20200928-500_2577.jpg
  • A large tripletail (Lobotes surinamensis) and jacks live under the cover of sargassum in the Sargasso Sea. Notice the plastic packing tie in the right of the frame.
    20190811-500_6109.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003450.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003446.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003429.jpg
  • Three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) under algae cover at the mouth of the Campbell River, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210524-500_8839.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003391.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003316.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003283.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003274.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003266.jpg
  • Opalescent inshore squid / market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens) mating and laying eggs. The female will deposit 100-300 eggs into the sand and cover them with a sticky substance to anchor them to the seabed and protect them from predators. The male squid uses its fifth arm (called the hectocotylus) to grab the female to insert spermatophores. Eggs present at the bottom of the ocean stimulates other females to lay their eggs and vast fields of the eggs can result. Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20230722-_5003536.jpg
  • A large tripletail (Lobotes surinamensis) and almaco jack fish (Seriola rivoliana) live under the cover of sargassum in the Sargasso Sea. Notice the plastic packing tie in the right of the frame. Image made in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, International Waters.
    20190811-500_6109.jpg
  • A sunflower sea star (Pycnopodia helianthoides) off Vancouver Island, BC, Canada. Sunflower stars experienced a more than 90% mortality rate from sea star wasting disease which emerged in 2013. Urchins, a prey item of the sunflower star, have since proliferated which has lead to major decreases in kelp cover. Kelp is a carbon sink.
    20210709-500_1555.jpg
  • Plastic bottles and other trash are covered in oil on a Havana shore near the cruise ship port.
    What Cruise Ships Leave
  • Hoar frost covers a dormant tree in a Saskatchewan winter.
    2010 Hoar Frost048.jpg
  • A sunflower sea star (Pycnopodia helianthoides) off Vancouver Island, BC, Canada. Sunflower stars experienced a more than 90% mortality rate from sea star wasting disease which emerged in 2013. Urchins, a prey item of the sunflower star, have since proliferated which has lead to major decreases in kelp cover. Kelp is a carbon sink.
    20210709-500_1660.jpg
  • A giant puffer uses a barrel sponge as cover.
    20180924-500_3612sm.jpg
  • A comparison of clean seagrass vs. seagrass covered in sediments kicked up by passing boat traffic. The more sediment, the less the seagrass blades can absorb sunlight to photosynthesize.
    Crushing Our Oxygen Producers.jpg
  • Greenmark hermit crab (Pagurus caurinus) on a bull kelp (Nereocystis luetkeana) frond covered in Kelp lace bryozoans (Membranipora serrilamella) in Browning Pass, Queen Charlotte Strait, Port Hardy, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada
    20210723-500_2786.jpg
  • Tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier) swimming over sargassum seaweed with an old, algae covered fishing hook in her mouth.  Image made off Grand Bahama Island, Bahamas.
    2014_10_08TB449.jpg
  • Anemone City is a dive site in Indonesia where the entire bottom, for miles, is completely covered in anemones
    20180928-500_4740sm.jpg
  • A red cave shrimp feasting on a dead crab that has fallen into an in-land pond on Eleuthera, Bahamas. Directly under the opening is a silty plain that is covered in the shrimp. When a possible food source falls into the pond the lucky shrimp will swim up off the bottom to avoid competition.
    Scavenger
  • A well-camouflaged C-O Sole (Pleuronichthys coenosus) rests on rocks covered in coralline algae with a plumose anemone (Metridium senile), white-spotted anemone (Urticina lofotensis), red sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus franciscanus). Browning Pass, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210722-500_2061.jpg
  • The floor of a blue hole in The Bahamas is covered in decaying matter, food for the Cuban red cave shrimp.
    2012_HI_Aug_29th045.jpg
  • An unknown species of pelagic swimming crab, covered in barnacles swimming in the open ocean at night. She is tending to her eggs in a pouch. Image made off Anilao, Philippines.
    20181008-500_7133.jpg
  • A coral covered wall with a Caribbean reef shark in the Background.
    TheWall
  • Sharpnose crab (Scyra acutifrons) sheltering in soft coral, while covered with tunicates. Browning Pass, Port Hardy, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
    20210724-500_4004.jpg
  • Greenmark hermit crab (Pagurus caurinus) on a bull kelp (Nereocystis luetkeana) frond covered in Kelp lace bryozoans (Membranipora serrilamella) in Browning Pass, Queen Charlotte Strait, Port Hardy, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada
    20210723-500_2799.jpg
  • An unknown species of pelagic swimming crab, covered in barnacles swimming in the open ocean at night. She is tending to her eggs in a pouch. Image made off Anilao, Philippines.
    20181008-500_7133.jpg
  • A porcelain crab (Neopetrolisthes maculatus) partially covered by a sea anemone and domino damselfish (Dascyllus trimaculatus) off Flores, Indonesia.
    20180924-500_3479.jpg
  • A green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas) rests behind the protection of a coral head covered in sponges. Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    20170121HI121.jpg
  • A comparison of clean seagrass vs. seagrass covered in sediments kicked up by passing boat traffic. The more sediment, the less the seagrass blades can absorb sunlight and photosynthesize.
    20180205-_DSC0351.jpg
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Shane Gross

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