
Tuesday, September 05, 2006

I just can't wait. I was going to write about my trips to Amsterdam
and Beijing
before anything else; but I was just too excited about my recent dive
trip to Manado, Indonesia; especially
the underwater photos that I took there. I spent the first day back in
the States not resting but busily "cleaning" and "cropping" the photos
with Adobe
Photoshop, organizing the photos (including tagging and file
naming), and finally uploading them to Flickr for sharing the photos with the
rest of the world.
The entire collection of my underwater photos can be found on my brand
new
account.
Below is a sample (the top 20) of the photos that I took from my dive
trip to Manado, Indonesia:
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Anemone Crab (3 cm)
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Anemone Hermit Crab (10
cm)
Notice the sea anemone on the hermit crab's shell. The
crab is chewing on something.
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Blue Spot Sea Hare (18 cm)
One of the most bizarre creature I have seen in Lembeh
Strait. It's a sea slug, and it is shaggy and big.
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Clark's Anemonefish (6
cm)
One of my favorite fishes to photograph underwater.
This one was quite startled by my presence but it settled down when I
took the picture.
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Cleaner Shrimp
(2.5 cm)
Cleaner shrimp provides cleaning service to fishes by
eating parasitic creatures on the host skin. This one, however, was
found sleeping in a burrow during a night dive.
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Coral (Heliogungia Actiniformis)
Close up shot of a coral.
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Flower Soft
Coral (Xeniidae)
This is one of the most beautiful corals I have ever
seen. Each of the feather-like feeding tentacles displays a beautiful
fluidic movement.
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Juvenile Clark's Anemonefish and Anemone Shrimp (3
cm)
Close up shot of a juvenile Clark's anemonefish and an
anemone shrimp.
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Mantis Shrimp (25
cm)
I was lucky to find this elusive mantis shrimp hiding
in a hole. Treat this creature with great respect. Also known as
smashers, they have powerful claws that they use to attack and kill prey
by spearing, stunning, or dismemberment.
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Nudibranch
(Chromodoris Elizabethina) (4 cm)
The highly ornate nudibranch conspicuously warns
predators that it is toxic.
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Ornate Ghost Pipefish (7
cm)
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Pink Anemonefish (8
cm)
Another Nemo moment.
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Ribbon Eel (40 cm)
Adult females have blue/yellow colored body. Males and
juveniles have black body.
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Snake Fish and Transparent Cleaner
Shrimp
Another bizarre fish with only the head protruding out
from the sand. Notice the two transparent shrimps (look very carefully,
click on the picture for the magnified version if you can't see
them).
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Soft Coral (Sinularia) (Close up)
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Tube Sea Anemone (Close
up)
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Tubeworm (2 cm)
(Extreme Close up)
A tubeworn with its feather-like feeding tentacles. It
is found next to a sea urchin.
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Two Undulated Moray
Eels
Morays are usually solitary creatures. I was lucky to
find a pair of morays.
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Unidentified Creature
I cannot identify this creature despite consulting
several marine field guides. From a far, it certainly looks like a sea
worm but upon closer inspection, it looks more like a nudibranch. Is it
a sea worm or nudibranch?
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Frogfish
This is a bottom-dwelling fish.
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See more of the underwater pictures at
!!!
| 9/5/2006 12:32:41 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
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Scuba Diving |
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