Una semana antes de esta fotografía, el individuo había varado en la playa Los Botes y fue devuelta al mar en la playa de la bahia.
They were at least 4 of them including one young baby living in this cave.
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Washed up on Ocean Beach, Strahan.
at least 2 individuals
Day 82, one individual.
Relacionado con // Related to:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/2667158
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/2667199
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/2667420
Tiny one with an interesting head.
Under a rock.
~1m subtidal
~0.6cm long
showing the under layer of fine fur
Big one hiding in a massive sponge.
~10cm long
~3m subtidal
Edit: I went back almost six months later and it is still there in the exact same spot. 29/09/22
Found in weakly made vertical sand tubes in intertidal zone of exposed shore
....and just over the observation deck were 3 big ones, resting and very much alive, piled up! Such spectacular animals! I'd go see them again in a heartbeat!
Same species as previously observed: 103465983.
Under a rock.
~2cm long
Shallow subtidal.
Feeding! Has this been seen before? Appears to be eating an Eatoniella.
Under a rock.
~0.6cm long
Shallow subtidal
Leucistic bird that appeared to have no black feathers at all.
6,25 meters long and calculated to weigh around 3000 kg. It ran into shallow water and could not get out again - had been working hard. Nobody saw it before it was dead.
Single seal observed at Petone Beach. Possibly a crabeater seal according to a specialist (had been seen in Otago earlier in week). Many spots on back and underside.
For reuse, also acknowledge LINZ (Land Information New Zealand)
Underwater recording of Weddell Seals by the McMurdo Oceanographic Observatory (www.moo-antarctica.net). Of potentially soniferous marine mammals, only Weddell seals occur in the area at this time of year. Verified also by regular visual/video observation. Hydrophone at 21m deep. (Attached photo is example of Weddell seal near the observatory site, but was not taken at the same time as the audio recording).
A pod of 300 seen as we arrived at the drift site, gave incredibly close views over a period of about 15 minutes.
Others (@kyeturnbull, @nhaass et al) have better photos.
Also seen same day were a smaller pod of False Killer Whales (no photos from me but see others), Risso's Dolphins (ditto), and likely Offshore Bottlenose Dolphins as well as a few other potential whale/dolphin sp.
This is the 18th Oriental Dotterel recorded in NZ. Was discovered by others on 29 September.
The other species to the previous ones I have observed?
Under a rock.
~1m subtidal
This pretty bristleworm has confusing taxonomy - can someone please help? "Reef Creature Identification," p. 90, calls it Painted Bristleworm - Hesione picta - but apparently that's old school:
http://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=328339
Mother & Calf - Epic
SeaTube URL of ROV video and audio: https://dmas.uvic.ca/SeaTube?resourceTypeId=1000&resourceId=23543&diveId=2651&time=2018-07-15
>>NOTE: please click the link then COPY-PASTE the following timecode to the end of the URL: T16:41:21.000Z
With Ulva sp. on pelage. Photos published in: Hayes, F. E., S. Codde, and S. G. Allen. 2022. Epizoic cyanobacteria and algae on the pelage of pinnipeds: a literature review and new data for the Harbor Seal (Phoca vitulina). Pacific Science 76(1):69-78.
Specimen #: BBEL_0169, Collection Event #: BLIZ_005, Common Name: polychaete worm, Family: Eunicidae, Magnification: .77x, Location: Smithsonian Institution's Field Station on Carrie Bow Cay, Belize
Повезло услышать песню тюленя в период брачных игр
Beneath rock slabs on low-lying rock platform in splash zone of lake shore.
Lots sitting on the salp chains. So beautiful in person with their amazing colours.
I also saw a small blue copoed(~3mm long) with blue eggs sitting on a salp chain. Didn't get any pics.
~0.5cm long
Male Killer whale (Orcinus orca) surfacing, with eye clear of the water, west of Snaefellsness Peninsular, Iceland
Type Ds. Perhaps 12. Many more photos uploaded to Happywhale
25 to 50; many photos of animals bow riding, breaching (mostly young babies, of which there were 5-10), and even heard calling (recording on video by Matt Hafner), a high multi-note high (Xantus''s Murrelet quality) sit-sit-sieeeeoooo, but also variable.
Type D
4 confirmed individuals
First New Zealand record. Saw the bird sheltering behind a small bush for around 30 minutes. It then turned and scurried out of sight behind the cliff face. 5 minutes later the bird was back in the same position behind the bush.
Any guesses out there, oarfish seems likely candidate, just could not find any photos of a juvenile this small. Thanks for your help!
Red-billed Gull x Black-billed Gull Hybrid
The F1 Hybrid
Te Papa specimen
Data and comparison to pure birds are within the observation photos
Originally collected in 1971, by L. Gurr (Louis Gurr)
Bill is shorter than a Black-billed Gull but skinnier than a Red-billed Gull.
An intermediate size/shape of the two.
Primaries show white spots that are larger than a Red-billed Gull's
Bill colour may have detreated slightly, but also appears to be an intermediate colour of the two species.
Last photo shows a comparison with the other hybrid (F1 top).
Found under rocks. Intertidal and subtidal collecting.
Depth 5m
Length 400mm
Does not seem to be the same as paddle worm ?