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  • Sally lightfoot crab (Grapsus grapsus) crosses a crack from one volcanic rock to another, Fernandina Island, Galapagos, Ecuador.
    20191210GalapagosTopside455.jpg
  • Portrait of a Sally lightfoot crab (Grapsus grapsus) on black volcanic rocks. Fernandina Island, Galapagos, Ecuador.
    20191210GalapagosTopside434.jpg
  • Sally lightfoot crabs (Grapsus grapsus), two, on black volcanic rocks. Fernandina Island, Galapagos, Ecuador.
    20191210GalapagosTopside428.jpg
  • A massive pile of queen conch (Lobatus gigas) shells, called a midden, in the water of Eleuthera, Bahamas.
    2015_09_03_HI149.jpg
  • A massive pile of queen conch (Lobatus gigas) shells, called a midden, in The Bahamas.
    2015_09_03_HI062.jpg
  • A pickup truck is used to transport a large catch of queen conch (Lobatus gigas). The fisherman will then crack them out of their shells in the parking lot where they are will be sold to tourists and locals. Image made on Eleuthera Island, Bahamas.
    2015_12_7HI148.jpg
  • A conch fisherman uses a small axe to crack the conch shell to get the muscle inslide. They sell the conch, a local delicacy, in a shopping center parking lot to locals and tourists alike.
    BahamasConchFishery19.jpg
  • A hatchet and knife sit on a bucket. These are the tools used to crack open queen conch (Lobatus gigas) the national food of The Bahamas. Image made on Harbour Island, Bahamas.
    20170427HI0971.jpg
  • South Eleuthera conch fisherman crack the days catch. They use their pickup truck to transport the conch to the market parking lot so locals and tourists can have a chance to purchase the animal as it is being de-shelled. Conch are the national food of the Bahamas.
    BahamasConchFishery18.jpg
  • A pickup truck is used to transport the large catch of conch. The fisherman will then crack them out of their shells in the parking lot where they are also sold to tourists and locals.
    BahamasConchFishery06.jpg
  • Conch shells become homes for other creatures like hermit crabs, but not if the shell is cracked for conch extraction. Scientists are predicting a fishery collapse is imminent, but how best to protect them is heatedly debated.
    BahamasConchFishery10.jpg
  • A banded sea krait hunts among the endless cracks and crevasses in the coral reef.
    20180930-500_5358sm.jpg
  • Conch shells become homes for other creatures like hermit crabs, but not if the shell is cracked for conch extraction. Scientists are predicting a fishery collapse is imminent, but how best to protect them is heatedly debated.
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Shane Gross

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