Mission CABO54, Station FC-17, VNet 200 um, 0-1000 m
Amundsen 2023, leg 2, station 153 with Tucker trawl (oblique tow 500 um) depth of 100 m
Mission CABO54, Station FC-17, VNet 200 um, 0-1000 m
picked up by Taeo Tsagkaris using a pool net right along the submerged wharf wall
Grab sampled from 374 m depth
Observed on the Northeast Pacific Deep-sea Expedition in August 2024. Look in the observation fields below for a link to the video, and check out the expedition website for more info at https://www.nepdep.com/2024expedition
Observed on the Northeast Pacific Deep-sea Expedition in August 2024. Look in the observation fields below for a link to the video, and check out the expedition website for more info at https://www.nepdep.com/2024expedition
¿Será de este género? Sería el primer registro en iNaturalist para Chile. El sitio de observación está cercano a un gran puerto dónde recalan barcos provenientes de distintos lugares del mundo.
¿Podría tratarse de Telmatactis decora?
Caught in Trawl during scientific cruise with Norwegian Institute of Marine Research (IMR)
Identified by Anne Kari Sveistrup
Caught in Trawl during scientific cruise with Norwegian Institute of Marine Research (IMR)
Identified by Anne Kari Sveistrup
Live specimen in shallow riverbank channel.
Large and healthy population in an exposed agricultural stretch of the river, seemingly quite polluted with agricultural run-off. Well known salmon river but with a very small run in recent decades.
Rough estimate of 200+ live adults observed in a quick partial survey of 100 m of riverbed upstream from the bridge. Surprisingly few shells found (4) despited the many drying shallow pools cut off from the main channel, hinting at the overall good heath of the population, despite the obvious signs of pollution. Many live juveniles observed. No other species observed in that stretch.
Северный Ледовитый океан, желоб Орли (Квитойя). 96 рейс НИС «Академик Мстислав Келдыш», станция 8054: дночерпатель "Океан", глубина ~530 м. Указаны место и дата лова.
NB: expedition works in agreement with the Norwegian authorities.
Карское море, желоб Св. Анны, глубина 228 м. 96 рейс НИС «Академик Мстислав Келдыш», ст. 8092, траление тралом Сигсби и обзор дна с помощью буксируемой платформы "Видеомодуль" (фото монитора на борту судна). Указаны место и дата собственно работ.
Looks from the spots like a damsel fish
Caught in Trawl during scientific cruise with Norwegian Institute of Marine Research (IMR)
Caught in Trawl during scientific cruise with Norwegian Institute of Marine Research (IMR)
Identified by Anne Kari Sveistrup
Caught in Trawl during scientific cruise with Norwegian Institute of Marine Research (IMR)
The white blob on the body of the white-and-orange-tip nudibranch
@jeffgodard
Sea scallop shell — could this actually be from a boring sponge? I’m used to them leaving a whole area covered in holes, not a pattern like this, but I’m unsure what else it might be
Caught in Trawl during scientific cruise with Norwegian Institute of Marine Research (IMR)
Identified by Anne Kari Sveistrup
Caught in Trawl during scientific cruise with Norwegian Institute of Marine Research (IMR)
Identified by Anne Kari Sveistrup
Caught in Trawl during scientific cruise with Norwegian Institute of Marine Research (IMR)
Identified by Anne Kari Sveistrup
Barnacle on California Spot Prawn. DeCourcy Island, Gulf Islands, BC, Canada
In pool. Anethetized, released
Macrophtalmia life stage, caught using dip net, released after recovering from anethetizing (dissolved clove oil) for weighing and measuring.
Captured during field excursion conducted by Dr. Linnansaari's laboratory in fish biology class through the University of New Brunswick.
Larval fish prey dropped by Little Auk as it had Calanus copepods attached to it and on the rock around it
The small bug like things in the first picture, NOT the water strider.
A Mantis Shrimp at the Ninigret tidal flats. At the time I assumed this was just a very small Squilla empusa, but now I think this is actually Nannosquilla grayi.
Shrimp like. Possibly juvenile form of something. Only one individual spotted. Approx. one inch long. Actively swimming, slowly in seawater column.
I will take more pictures of these in the future but I am very curious to know what they are! They can grow almost the size of my head and are always attached to something like a rock or Boulder. They have one kind of flat side and one lumpy rounded side. Ridges all the way down and scaly growth like an oyster. Really interesting
This squid was washed up to the high tide line in Port Althorp (off Cross Sound) and was being scavenged by several ravens, crows and a bald eagle
@1000ft on aboard Stanley Sub ‘Idabel’ with Roatan Institute of Deepsea Exploration
1200ft on board Stanley Submarine Idabel Roatan Institute of Deepsea Exploration
Planktonic larva, pointed rostrum punctured hand at night, photographed on plastic cap once plucked from the flesh
We saw two of these today during a night dive, 12 m depth, on kelp. It seemed to retract when the light hit it - when I first saw it, it was circa three times larger than in the picture (around 4-5 cm), but then retracted it’s foot. I never saw the top open. Some kind of anemone?
mostly due to the ID made by @crabsandshrimps at https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/240680925 , also on a solitary tunicate
Saw four in total during the O'Brien's boat tour in Witless Bay