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  • A swimmer excites microscopic dinoflagellates into producing bioluminescence while boats enter the bay in the background. The Bio Bay near Parguera, Puerto Rico, is one of only five in the world and is a major tourist attraction. When the double hurricanes hit in 2017 two of Puerto Rico's three Bio Bays went dark, just like the cities, hurting tourism and jobs for months, if not years to come.
    Gross_PuertoRico026.jpg
  • Swimmers with orange life-jackets excite microscopic dinoflagellates into producing bioluminescence. The Bio Bay near Parguera, Puerto Rico, is one of only five in the world and is a major tourist attraction. When the double hurricanes hit in 2017 two of Puerto Rico's three Bio Bays went dark, just like the cities, hurting tourism and jobs for months, if not years to come.
    Gross_PuertoRico025.jpg
  • A swimmer excites microscopic dinoflagellates into producing bioluminescence while boats enter the bay in the background. The Bio Bay near Parguera, Puerto Rico, is one of only five in the world and is a major tourist attraction. When the double hurricanes hit in 2017 two of Puerto Rico's three Bio Bays went dark, just like the cities, hurting tourism and jobs for months, if not years to come.
    Gross_PuertoRico027.jpg
  • A swimmer with an orange life preserver excites microscopic dinoflagellates into producing bioluminescence. The Bio Bay near Parguera, Puerto Rico, is one of only five in the world and is a major tourist attraction. When the double hurricanes hit in 2017 two of Puerto Rico's three Bio Bays went dark, just like the cities, hurting tourism and jobs for months, if not years to come.
    Bio Bay.jpg
  • After a magnitude 6.4 earthquake in southern Puerto Rico (Magas Arriba) many families couldn't live in their damaged homes or feared aftershocks and built make-shift campsites for shelter.
    Gross_PuertoRico094.jpg
  • A home in southern Puerto Rico (magas arriba) collapsed during a 6.4 magnitude earthquake on Jan 6th, 2020.
    Gross_PuertoRico090.jpg
  • A swimmer excites microscopic dinoflagellates into producing bioluminescence. The Bio Bay near Parguera, Puerto Rico, is one of only five in the world and is a major tourist attraction.
    Gross_PuertoRico018.jpg
  • A home in southern Puerto Rico (magas arriba) collapsed during a 6.4 magnitude earthquake on Jan 6th, 2020.
    Gross_PuertoRico091.jpg
  • A home in southern Puerto Rico (magas arriba) collapsed during a 6.4 magnitude earthquake on Jan 6th, 2020.
    Gross_PuertoRico092.jpg
  • A home in southern Puerto Rico (magas arriba) collapsed during a 6.4 magnitude earthquake on Jan 6th, 2020.
    Gross_PuertoRico093.jpg
  • A swimmer excites microscopic dinoflagellates into producing bioluminescence. The Bio Bay near Parguera, Puerto Rico, is one of only five in the world and is a major tourist attraction.
    Gross_PuertoRico029.jpg
  • A swimmer excites microscopic dinoflagellates into producing bioluminescence. The Bio Bay near Parguera, Puerto Rico, is one of only five in the world and is a major tourist attraction. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico017.jpg
  • Heriberto Martir from the University of Puerto Rico's "Vida Marina" inspects his work. Wooden steaks from discarded pallets placed in a matrix change wind patterns to build up sand dunes along the north coast of Puerto Rico. "Vida Marina"  focuses on the management and ecological restoration and conservation of coastal ecosystems, endemic plants and marine turtle species. This project aims to restore sand dunes for coastal protection during storms, nesting sea turtles and other benefits. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico045.jpg
  • Heriberto Martir from the University of Puerto Rico's "Vida Marina" inspects his work. Wooden steaks from discarded pallets placed in a matrix change wind patterns to build up sand dunes along the north coast of Puerto Rico. "Vida Marina"  focuses on the management and ecological restoration and conservation of coastal ecosystems, endemic plants and marine turtle species. This project aims to restore sand dunes for coastal protection during storms, nesting sea turtles and other benefits. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico045.jpg
  • Swimmers with orange life-jackets excite microscopic dinoflagellates into producing bioluminescence. The Bio Bay near Parguera, Puerto Rico, is one of only five in the world and is a major tourist attraction. When the double hurricanes hit in 2017 two of Puerto Rico's three Bio Bays went dark, just like the cities, hurting tourism and jobs for months, if not years to come.
    Gross_PuertoRico025.jpg
  • Luis D. Amayo from the University of Puerto Rico's Vida Marina program constructs an elevated walkway to help built up the sand dunes for coastal protection and nesting sea turtles along the north coast of Puerto Rico. As people walk over the same part of a sand dune it wears away the dune creating weaknesses for large waves to break through. "Vida Marina"  focuses on the management, ecological restoration and conservation of coastal ecosystems, endemic plants and marine turtle species. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico047.jpg
  • Gumball machines filled with fish food line a tourist dock in Parguera, Puerto Rico, to feed the protected tarpon fish. This area of Puerto Rico was one of the least hit during the double hurricanes of 2017.
    Gross_PuertoRico043.jpg
  • Heriberto Martir from the University of Puerto Rico's "Vida Marina" inspects his work. Wooden steaks from discarded pallets placed in a matrix change wind patterns to build up sand dunes along the north coast of Puerto Rico. "Vida Marina"  focuses on the management and ecological restoration and conservation of coastal ecosystems, endemic plants and marine turtle species. This project aims to restore sand dunes for coastal protection during storms, nesting sea turtles and other benefits. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico044.jpg
  • A Puerto Rican flag, torn by the wind, outside a gift shop in Cabo Rojo.
    Gross_PuertoRico061.jpg
  • A view of damages in Guanica town after 6.4-magnitude earthquake hit Puerto Rico on Jan. 7, 2020.
    Gross_PuertoRico002.jpg
  • Commercial fisherman Andres Maldonado goes on the hunt for lobster, conch, and various fish species off Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. He noticed drastic and obvious declines in fish numbers and habitat availbale after Hurricane Maria in 2017 which put many other commercial fisherman out of business. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico072.jpg
  • Commercial fisherman Andres Maldonado catches a Caribbean spiny lobster (Panulirus argus) off Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. He noticed drastic and obvious declines in fish numbers and habitat availbale after Hurricane Maria in 2017 which put many other commercial fisherman out of business. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico075.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
  • An almost-blind hawksbill sea turle in a recovery tank at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico after being dragged by hooks in her eyes by fisherman looking to eat her.
    Gross_PuertoRico116.jpg
  • Pelican plays and feeds at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico101.jpg
  • A Caribbean spiny lobster (Panulirus argus) hides under a ledge on a coral reef off Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico076.jpg
  • Commercial fisherman Andres Maldonado hunts for more lionfish after spearing several of the invasive species off Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. He noticed drastic and obvious declines in fish numbers and habitat availbale after Hurricane Maria in 2017 which put many other commercial fisherman out of business. Lionfish eat native fish and contribute to fish declines, compounding the problem. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico070.jpg
  • After almost three years there are still large areas of dead mangroves in Puerto Rico, like this in Cabo Rojo, after hurrican Maria. Mangroves are a shoreline's best known defence during large storms and important habitat for many bird and fish species.
    Gross_PuertoRico064.jpg
  • Crash Boat Beach, in Puerto Rico's northwest, sustained significant damage during hurricanes Maria and Irma in 2017. These dock pilings were bent right over, destroying the marina, and the life that was living on them, including large sponges and anemonies, were killed. In 2020 they are just beginning to come back.
    Gross_PuertoRico041.jpg
  • Bio Bay guide Irwin Velez retired from the police force after open heart surgery. The job is far less stressful and he enjoys taking tourists to see his local waters and the amazing bioluminescence near Parguera, Puerto Rico. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico003.jpg
  • After almost three years there are still large areas of dead mangroves in Puerto Rico, like this in Cabo Rojo, after hurrican Maria. Mangroves are a shoreline's best known defence during large storms and important habitat for many bird and fish species.
    Gross_PuertoRico067.jpg
  • A swimmer excites microscopic dinoflagellates into producing bioluminescence. The Bio Bay near Parguera, Puerto Rico, is one of only five in the world and is a major tourist attraction.
    Gross_PuertoRico053.jpg
  • Bio Bay guide Irwin Velez retired from the police force after open heart surgery. The job is far less stressful and he enjoys taking tourists to see his local waters and the amazing bioluminescence near Parguera, Puerto Rico. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico005.jpg
  • Puerto Rico has many homes, like these in Parguera, literally on the water making them highly vulnerable to large storms like hurricanes.
    Gross_PuertoRico006.jpg
  • Commercial fisherman Andres Maldonado catches a Caribbean spiny lobster (Panulirus argus) off Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. He noticed drastic and obvious declines in fish numbers and habitat availbale after Hurricane Maria in 2017 which put many other commercial fisherman out of business. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico075.jpg
  • After almost three years there are still large areas of dead mangroves in Puerto Rico, like this in Cabo Rojo, after hurrican Maria. Mangroves are a shoreline's best known defence during large storms.
    Gross_PuertoRico066.jpg
  • A swimmer excites microscopic dinoflagellates into producing bioluminescence. The Bio Bay near Parguera, Puerto Rico, is one of only five in the world and is a major tourist attraction.
    Gross_PuertoRico052.jpg
  • A swimmer excites microscopic dinoflagellates into producing bioluminescence. The Bio Bay near Parguera, Puerto Rico, is one of only five in the world and is a major tourist attraction.
    Gross_PuertoRico048.jpg
  • Crash Boat Beach, in Puerto Rico's northwest, sustained significant damage during hurricanes Maria and Irma in 2017. These dock pilings were bent right over, destroying the marina, and the life that was living on them, including large sponges and anemonies, were killed. In 2020 they are just beginning to come back.
    Gross_PuertoRico040.jpg
  • A child's bicycle lays next to a large concrete dock underwater off Crash Boat Beach, in Puerto Rico's northwest. A stonefish, a master of camoflauge, awaits a meal in the rear tire. The dock and marina sustained significant damage during hurricanes Maria and Irma in 2017. Dock pilings were bent right over, destroying the marina, and the life that was living on them, including large sponges and anemonies. In 2020 they are just beginning to come back.
    Gross_PuertoRico033.jpg
  • JP Zegarra of the US Fish and Wildlife Service swims alongside a green sea turtle over a seagrass bed off Crash Boat Beach, Puerto Rico. Seagrass is not only a main food source for endangered green turtles, it also stabalizes sediment and sequesters carbon, helping in our fight agaisnt climate change.
    Gross_PuertoRico030.jpg
  • Bio Bay guide Irwin Velez retired from the police force after open heart surgery. The job is far less stressful and he enjoys taking tourists to see his local waters and the amazing bioluminescence near Parguera, Puerto Rico. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico004.jpg
  • Scientists and veterinarians feed a recovering loggerhead sea turtle at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico121.jpg
  • Crash Boat Beach, in Puerto Rico's northwest, sustained significant damage during hurricanes Maria and Irma in 2017. These dock pilings were bent right over, destroying the marina, and the life that was living on them, including large sponges and anemonies, were killed. In 2020 they are just beginning to come back.
    Gross_PuertoRico035.jpg
  • Mangroves hold sediments and can form barrier islands like these off Parguera, Puerto Rico, one of the few areas that faired well during hurricanes Maria and Irma in 2017.
    Gross_PuertoRico015.jpg
  • A tourist walks through a mangrove boardwalk off La Parguera, Puerto Rico. Mangroves are not only the best known defence against storm surge, they are also beautiful and, when done right, can be a sustainable tourist attraction.
    Gross_PuertoRico012.jpg
  • After almost three years there are still large areas of dead mangroves in Puerto Rico, like this in Cabo Rojo, after hurrican Maria. Mangroves are a shoreline's best known defence during large storms and important habitat for many bird and fish species.
    Gross_PuertoRico062.jpg
  • Veterinarian Lesly Cabrias performs surgery on an abandoned manatee calf at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico108.jpg
  • In Puerto Rico's southwest, Cabo Rojo, mangrove trees that died during hurricane Maria in 2017 have still not recovered in 2020. Mangroves are the best-known defence in large storms producing large waves. A shoreline is greatly weakened without mangroves.
    Gross_PuertoRico087.jpg
  • Crash Boat Beach, in Puerto Rico's northwest, sustained significant damage during hurricanes Maria and Irma in 2017. These dock pilings were bent right over, destroying the marina, and the life that was living on them, including large sponges and anemonies, were killed. In 2020 they are just beginning to come back.
    Gross_PuertoRico037.jpg
  • In Puerto Rico's Cabo Rojo, washed up trash and dead mangrove trees still dominate some areas almost three years after hurricane Maria in 2017.
    20200228-DSC_1202.jpg
  • Scientists and veterinarians feed a recovering loggerhead sea turtle at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico121.jpg
  • Scientists and veterenarians treat an abandoned manatee calf at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico104.jpg
  • Tilapia are raised in a tank at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico097.jpg
  • In Puerto Rico's southwest, Cabo Rojo, mangrove trees that died during hurricane Maria in 2017 have still not recovered in 2020. Mangroves are the best-known defence in large storms producing large waves. A shoreline is greatly weakened without mangroves.
    Gross_PuertoRico088.jpg
  • Commercial fisherman Andres Maldonado hunts lobsters and fish off Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. He noticed drastic and obvious declines in fish numbers and habitat availbale after Hurricane Maria in 2017 which put many other commercial fisherman out of business. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico079.jpg
  • Commercial fisherman Andres Maldonado goes on the hunt for lobster, conch, and various fish species off Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. He noticed drastic and obvious declines in fish numbers and habitat availbale after Hurricane Maria in 2017 which put many other commercial fisherman out of business. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico072.jpg
  • Commercial fisherman Andres Maldonado rises to the surface with a bag of lionfish after spearing several of the invasive species off Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. He noticed drastic and obvious declines in fish numbers and habitat availbale after Hurricane Maria in 2017 which put many other commercial fisherman out of business. Lionfish eat native fish and contribute to fish declines. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico071.jpg
  • The Guajataca dam in northern Puerto Rico was severely damaged by the 2017 hurricanes. By all accounts it was very close to collapsing completely which would have flooded some 70,000 people. At the time, all 70,000 were advised to evacuate. Emergency repairs kept the worst from happening, but 10,000 residents and farmers have since struggled with water management.
    Gross_PuertoRico056.jpg
  • A swimmer excites microscopic dinoflagellates into producing bioluminescence. The Bio Bay near Parguera, Puerto Rico, is one of only five in the world and is a major tourist attraction.
    Gross_PuertoRico054.jpg
  • Crash Boat Beach, in Puerto Rico's northwest, sustained significant damage during hurricanes Maria and Irma in 2017. These dock pilings were bent right over, destroying the marina, and the life that was living on them, including large sponges and anemonies, were killed. In 2020 they are just beginning to come back.
    Gross_PuertoRico039.jpg
  • Crash Boat Beach, in Puerto Rico's northwest, sustained significant damage during hurricanes Maria and Irma in 2017. These dock pilings were bent right over, destroying the marina, and the life that was living on them, including large sponges and anemonies, were killed. In 2020 they are just beginning to come back.
    Gross_PuertoRico037.jpg
  • Crash Boat Beach, in Puerto Rico's northwest, sustained significant damage during hurricanes Maria and Irma in 2017. These dock pilings were bent right over, destroying the marina, and the life that was living on them, including large sponges and anemonies, were killed. In 2020 they are just beginning to come back.
    Gross_PuertoRico036.jpg
  • A child's bicycle lays next to a large concrete dock underwater off Crash Boat Beach, in Puerto Rico's northwest. The dock and marina sustained significant damage during hurricanes Maria and Irma in 2017. Dock pilings were bent right over, destroying the marina, and the life that was living on them, including large sponges and anemonies. In 2020 they are just beginning to come back.
    Gross_PuertoRico034.jpg
  • A child's bicycle lays next to a large concrete dock underwater off Crash Boat Beach, in Puerto Rico's northwest. The dock and marina sustained significant damage during hurricanes Maria and Irma in 2017. Dock pilings were bent right over, destroying the marina, and the life that was living on them, including large sponges and anemonies. In 2020 they are just beginning to come back.
    Gross_PuertoRico032.jpg
  • Mangroves hold sediments and can form barrier islands like these off Parguera, Puerto Rico, one of the few areas that faired well during hurricane Maria and Irma in 2017.
    Gross_PuertoRico024.jpg
  • A crab walks along a popular beach called Crashboat Beach along Puerto Rico's North West coast. The beach was decimated by hurricane Maria in 2017, destroying the fishing village and marina. in 2020 the sand is still meters lower than before the storm.
    Gross_PuertoRico022.jpg
  • Near the town of Parguera in Puerto Rico's southwest, propeller scars weaken a seagrass bed. Seagrass and mangroves are important defences during large storms. They also sequester carbon more efficiently than terrestrial plants helping in the fight against climate change.
    Gross_PuertoRico019.jpg
  • Bio Bay guide Irwin Velez retired from the police force after open heart surgery. The job is far less stressful and he enjoys taking tourists to see his local waters and the amazing bioluminescence near Parguera, Puerto Rico. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico009.jpg
  • Bio Bay guide Irwin Velez retired from the police force after open heart surgery. The job is far less stressful and he enjoys taking tourists to see his local waters and the amazing bioluminescence near Parguera, Puerto Rico. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico005.jpg
  • A view of damages in Guanica town after 6.4-magnitude earthquake hit Puerto Rico on Jan. 7, 2020.
    Gross_PuertoRico002.jpg
  • A volunteer feeds injured pelicans at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico099.jpg
  • A swimmer excites microscopic dinoflagellates into producing bioluminescence. The Bio Bay near Parguera, Puerto Rico, is one of only five in the world and is a major tourist attraction.
    Gross_PuertoRico018.jpg
  • Puerto Rico has many homes, like these in Parguera, literally on the water making them highly vulnerable to large storms like hurricanes.
    Gross_PuertoRico007.jpg
  • Puerto Rico has many homes, like these in Parguera, literally on the water making them highly vulnerable to large storms like hurricanes.
    Gross_PuertoRico008.jpg
  • In Puerto Rico's southwest, Cabo Rojo, mangrove trees that died during hurricane Maria in 2017 have still not recovered in 2020. Mangroves are the best-known defence in large storms producing large waves. A shoreline is greatly weakened without mangroves.
    Gross_PuertoRico088.jpg
  • A home in southern Puerto Rico (magas arriba) collapsed during a 6.4 magnitude earthquake on Jan 6th, 2020.
    Gross_PuertoRico093.jpg
  • Commercial fisherman Andres Maldonado cuts the venomous spines off a lionfish after spearing the invasive species off Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. He noticed drastic and obvious declines in fish numbers and habitat availbale after Hurricane Maria in 2017 which put many other commercial fisherman out of business. Lionfish eat native fish and contribute to fish declines. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico069.jpg
  • A swimmer excites microscopic dinoflagellates into producing bioluminescence. The Bio Bay near Parguera, Puerto Rico, is one of only five in the world and is a major tourist attraction.
    Gross_PuertoRico050.jpg
  • Tilapia are raised in a tank at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico115.jpg
  • Researchers Kevin Perez and Laura Soler feed a green sea turtle with cancer at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico110.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
  • Veterinarian Lesly Cabrias performs surgery on an abandoned manatee calf at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico108.jpg
  • Veterinarian Lesly Cabrias and scientist Kevin Perez return an abandoned manatee calf to her pool after treatment at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico106.jpg
  • Scientist Monica Cruz braces a baby manatee while veterenarians treat the calf at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico103.jpg
  • Scientists feed a green sea turtle with cancer - you can see cancerous growths around the eye - at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico102.jpg
  • A volunteer feeds injured pelicans at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico100.jpg
  • A volunteer feeds injured pelicans at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico099.jpg
  • Volunteers add medicine to a herring fish to be fed to a sick sea turtle at the Manatee Conservation Center in Puerto Rico.
    Gross_PuertoRico098.jpg
  • In Puerto Rico's southwest, Cabo Rojo, mangrove trees that died during hurricane Maria in 2017 have still not recovered in 2020. Mangroves are the best-known defence in large storms producing large waves. A shoreline is greatly weakened without mangroves.
    Gross_PuertoRico089.jpg
  • In Puerto Rico's southwest, Cabo Rojo, mangrove trees that died during hurricane Maria in 2017 have still not recovered in 2020. Mangroves are the best-known defence in large storms producing large waves. A shoreline is greatly weakened without mangroves.
    Gross_PuertoRico087.jpg
  • In Puerto Rico's southwest, Cabo Rojo, mangrove trees that died during hurricane Maria in 2017 have still not recovered in 2020. Mangroves are the best-known defence in large storms producing large waves. A shoreline is greatly weakened without mangroves.
    Gross_PuertoRico086.jpg
  • In Puerto Rico's southwest, Cabo Rojo, mangrove trees that died during hurricane Maria in 2017 have still not recovered in 2020. Mangroves are the best-known defence in large storms producing large waves. A shoreline is greatly weakened without mangroves.
    Gross_PuertoRico085.jpg
  • In Puerto Rico's southwest, Cabo Rojo, mangrove trees that died during hurricane Maria in 2017 have still not recovered in 2020. Mangroves are the best-known defence in large storms producing large waves. A shoreline is greatly weakened without mangroves.
    Gross_PuertoRico084.jpg
  • In Puerto Rico's southwest, Cabo Rojo, mangrove trees that died during hurricane Maria in 2017 have still not recovered in 2020. Mangroves are the best-known defence in large storms producing large waves. A shoreline is greatly weakened without mangroves.
    Gross_PuertoRico083.jpg
  • Commercial fisherman Andres Maldonado rises to the surface with a bag of lobsters and fish after a dive off Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. He noticed drastic and obvious declines in fish numbers and habitat availbale after Hurricane Maria in 2017 which put many other commercial fisherman out of business. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico078.jpg
  • Commercial fisherman Andres Maldonado goes on the hunt for lobster, conch, and various fish species off Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. He noticed drastic and obvious declines in fish numbers and habitat availbale after Hurricane Maria in 2017 which put many other commercial fisherman out of business. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico073.jpg
  • Commercial fisherman Andres Maldonado catches a Caribbean spiny lobster (Panulirus argus) off Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. He noticed drastic and obvious declines in fish numbers and habitat availbale after Hurricane Maria in 2017 which put many other commercial fisherman out of business. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico074.jpg
  • After almost three years there are still large areas of dead mangroves in Puerto Rico, like this in Cabo Rojo, after hurrican Maria. Mangroves are a shoreline's best known defence during large storms and important habitat for many bird and fish species.
    Gross_PuertoRico067.jpg
  • Commercial fisherman Andres Maldonado cuts the venomous spines off a lionfish after spearing the invasive species off Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. He noticed drastic and obvious declines in fish numbers and habitat availbale after Hurricane Maria in 2017 which put many other commercial fisherman out of business. Lionfish eat native fish and contribute to fish declines. Image release available.
    Gross_PuertoRico069.jpg
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