Underwater photos from Mauritius
- Carp37
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Underwater photos from Mauritius
I've just got a new computer, and whilst trawling through disks to see what software needed putting on, I found a disk with these photos from a 2000 holiday in Mauritius. The quality's a bit poor, as they were taken with a disposable underwater camera, then scanned at too low a resolution, but they give some idea of the reef life.
barracuda
black trigger
butterflyfish
Gnathodentex aureolineatus
very large trigger- lots of reef fish used to follow this around, looking for food as it lifted up rocks/coral etc.
moray eel found in a tidal pool
some form of tropical mullet- these got 3-4 feet in length
Plotosus lineatus
Scomberoides
squid
tangs
electric ray (awful picture)
trumpetfish
unicorn tang
barracuda
black trigger
butterflyfish
Gnathodentex aureolineatus
very large trigger- lots of reef fish used to follow this around, looking for food as it lifted up rocks/coral etc.
moray eel found in a tidal pool
some form of tropical mullet- these got 3-4 feet in length
Plotosus lineatus
Scomberoides
squid
tangs
electric ray (awful picture)
trumpetfish
unicorn tang
Megalechis thoracata, Callichthys callichthys, Brochis splendens (and progeny), Corydoras sterbai, C. weitzmani, CW044 cf. pestai, CW021 cf. axelrodi, Pterygoplichthys gibbiceps, Ancistrus cf. cirrhosus (and progeny), Panaque maccus, Panaque nigrolineatus, Synodontis eupterus
- Bristlenose 94
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Re: Underwater photos from Mauritius
Impressive!! Wouldn't wanna get too close to that ray...
- Dee
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Re: Underwater photos from Mauritius
Nice pictures! It took me a second to spot the electric ray (I know, right in the middle of the picture ).
Did you take these scuba diving or snorkelling? I don't know how to scuba dive yet, but I was still amazed by how much I could see just snorkelling when last on holiday near a reef.
Did you take these scuba diving or snorkelling? I don't know how to scuba dive yet, but I was still amazed by how much I could see just snorkelling when last on holiday near a reef.
Re: Underwater photos from Mauritius
I am off to SEA soon and the wife wants to go diving. I can’t wait some nasty fish bites her and she has it in tears
The photos are amazing.
I love the one of the CATS all in a bunch.
The photos are amazing.
I love the one of the CATS all in a bunch.
- RickE
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Re: Underwater photos from Mauritius
I thought Mauritius was a lovely island and very nice native people. Would love to go back but I have to visit some other Indian Ocean Islands first! The trigger is Balistoides viridescens, watch out for them when they have a nest! We saw some HUGE ones in the Maldives.
Rick
- Carp37
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Re: Underwater photos from Mauritius
These were all snorkelling- I snorkelled for two sessions each day, from one to two hours mostly (nearly four hours when I mistake of following the big mullet, then got caught in a tide rip). One of the barracuda persuaded me to stop following it one day- after a couple of minutes of lazily following it, it suddenly turned round then swam three times round me in a tight circle snapping its jaws- I took that as barracuda-speak for "leave me alone or I'll bite you!"Dee wrote:Did you take these scuba diving or snorkelling? I don't know how to scuba dive yet, but I was still amazed by how much I could see just snorkelling when last on holiday near a reef.
Megalechis thoracata, Callichthys callichthys, Brochis splendens (and progeny), Corydoras sterbai, C. weitzmani, CW044 cf. pestai, CW021 cf. axelrodi, Pterygoplichthys gibbiceps, Ancistrus cf. cirrhosus (and progeny), Panaque maccus, Panaque nigrolineatus, Synodontis eupterus
- Carp37
- Posts: 596
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- My cats species list: 16 (i:7, k:0)
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- Location 2: Aughton UK
- Interests: fish, fishing, fossils, evolution/taxonomy, films
Re: Underwater photos from Mauritius
These were my favourite fish too (but then again they are catfish); they reminded me of baby bullhead cats in France- it took us nearly a week to find them; I can't imagine why such poisonous fish are so secretive. Then again, it was a shock to see that lionfish also hid during the day; the locals catch them at night to eat.macvsog23 wrote:I love the one of the CATS all in a bunch.
Megalechis thoracata, Callichthys callichthys, Brochis splendens (and progeny), Corydoras sterbai, C. weitzmani, CW044 cf. pestai, CW021 cf. axelrodi, Pterygoplichthys gibbiceps, Ancistrus cf. cirrhosus (and progeny), Panaque maccus, Panaque nigrolineatus, Synodontis eupterus
- Carp37
- Posts: 596
- Joined: 21 Sep 2007, 13:08
- My cats species list: 16 (i:7, k:0)
- My aquaria list: 7 (i:6)
- My BLogs: 2 (i:0, p:75)
- Location 2: Aughton UK
- Interests: fish, fishing, fossils, evolution/taxonomy, films
Re: Underwater photos from Mauritius
How big do these get? This was over 1m long and we estimated 20-25 lbs. in weight. Another species of trigger gave me my only ever "help! I'm afraid of this fish!" moment when a 6-8" fish chased me for over 400 yards (mainly in circles) and over 2 minutes, trying to bite me- I'm assuming it was guarding a nest. I did try snorkelling just before dawn one day (we saw a shark in the inner reef when out walking at night) to see if anything different came round, but aside from another electric ray and a stonefish, I didn't see anything different.RickE wrote:The trigger is Balistoides viridescens, watch out for them when they have a nest! We saw some HUGE ones in the Maldives.
Megalechis thoracata, Callichthys callichthys, Brochis splendens (and progeny), Corydoras sterbai, C. weitzmani, CW044 cf. pestai, CW021 cf. axelrodi, Pterygoplichthys gibbiceps, Ancistrus cf. cirrhosus (and progeny), Panaque maccus, Panaque nigrolineatus, Synodontis eupterus