Friday, April 19, 2019

Marine life

As with reptiles, I had not been particularly interested in marine life, but a warm aquarium is nice to visit in winter. In many cases, the lighting is rather dim, and I have a hard time getting a good image unless the animal is close to the glass. An exception is the well-lighted Pacific sea nettle.

Yellow and orange sea nettle jellyfish with entangled tentacles
Pacific sea nettle (Toledo Zoo)
This fish has narrow gray and white stripes overlaid with yellow stripes and spots. The tail is gray with lighter gray spots.
Red Sea sailfin tang (Columbus Zoo)

This fish has wide gray and narrow white stripes overlaid with yellow stripes. It has a yellow tail.
sailfin tang (Toledo Zoo)
The turtle swims to the right, with a manatee also swimming to the right.
Buddy, a female hawksbill sea turtle, and a Florida manatee (Columbus Zoo)

Buddy is gray, yellow, and white and has oval eyes.
Tink, a green sea turtle (Toledo Zoo)

Three orange, white, and black clownfish swim among pink anemone tentacles.
clownfish and their anemones (Toledo Zoo)

Four sea nettle jellyfish are stacked vertically.
Pacific sea nettles (Toledo Zoo)



1 comment:

  1. Marine photos are so awesome,, there is a “fluid” elegance that one should appreciate knowing the circumstantial conditions they are taken within..

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