Did you know that #coldwater #corals are important components of the marine #carbon cycle? Cool study recently out in @EGU_BioGeo shows how impactful they are as a carbon sink.
https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/22/2201/2025/bg-22-2201-2025.html
Did you know that #coldwater #corals are important components of the marine #carbon cycle? Cool study recently out in @EGU_BioGeo shows how impactful they are as a carbon sink.
https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/22/2201/2025/bg-22-2201-2025.html
Another critter-packed dive up at Fort Constitution Pier in New Hampshire. I found a really good rock with all the critters on it!
Visited Folly Cove for the first time in a few months and found a nice variety of different nudi species. We saw a couple Ancula gibbosa, a few Ananthodoris pilosa, and even an Onchidoris muricata. My favorite find of the dive was a large mysis shrimp that I followed for a bit and managed to photograph in the water column. Nice dive!
Some images from another excellent dive at Peirce Island in Portsmouth, New Hampshire in mid-March.
Some images from a dive at the Fort Constitution Pier in New Castle, New Hampshire back in mid-March.
Some images from a dive at Peirce Island in Portsmouth, New Hampshire back in February. This site is absolutely jam-packed with life this time of year and this dive was no exception. The sculpin eggs were a real treat!
A selection of critters from a December dive at the UNH Research Pier in New Castle, New Hampshire
Dive number: 667
Date / time: Mon Dec 9, 2024 10:15 AM
Dive site: Folly Cove, Massachusetts
Water Temperature: 45F
Bottom Time: 1h4m
Met up with a buddy for a morning dive at Folly. The visibility was great, but we just didn't find a whole heck of a lot. A few rim-backed nudis, some moon snails, some anemones, and not much else.
I found this fifteen-scaled worm at Canoe Beach in Nahant, Massachusetts this week. I've seen this species on numerous occasions, but they are usually crawling through dense seaweed and are difficult to photograph. This one appeared to be hunting amphipods on the rock (you can see two in the foreground slightly out of focus) and I think I even saw it grab one.
This sculpin stood out from its generally pink surroundings with its bright white color. I liked the pink pattern radiating out from the eye and even showing inside the eye.
Prints: https://briangweber.com/featured/white-and-pink-sculpin-brian-weber.html
I'm starting a new monthly series where I blog about my dives over the prior month. This is the first installment, complete with tons of pictures! Enjoy!
My buddy let me borrow his drysuit, so I was able to get back in the water before my new drysuit arrives. This was a super shallow dive (max 12 ft), but we found some good critters in our short, chilly dive.
My gear failed me big time on this dive (dry glove leaking, drysuit zipper fully opened underwater, computer battery dead) but it's amazing what a friendly cephalopod can do! We only get octopuses in New England occasionally, so it's a special treat when we get to dive with them.
This American eel was spotted on a night dive in Rhode Island, USA. It was about four feet long and mostly unbothered by our bright lights. They are fascinating creatures as they inhabit fresh water and shallow water environments until it is time to spawn when they head very far offshore.
Print: https://briangweber.com/featured/american-eel-brian-weber.html
How good could a dive be where I have a total drysuit flood? Very very good is the answer! We had an awesome encounter with a common octopus in Rhode Island! I took a million pictures, but here's one to get you started
I just added a new blog post with a gallery of tropical creatures I have found in New England waters! It was a lot of fun going through the images and collecting them for this post. I will continue to add to it over time as I find more.
Kind of a quiet dive on October 11 at Folly Cove. We entered around mid-tide with no issues due to sand covering all of the tricky rocks. We saw some gunnels, a striper carcass being cleaned up crabs and lobsters, a few pipefish, and a puffer who was NOT interested in being photographed. Water temps were just fine, but the air + wind were chilly, so it's officially dry suit season for me.
The ocean had been very stirred up for several days so we headed up to Fort Constitution near Portsmouth, New Hampshire to check out the river. This site is full of interesting life, but the visibility is always bad. It was great to get out diving and find some cool creatures!
#ConvictedFelon #DonaldTrump #Admits He #Played #MAGA For #Fools.
#DementedDonald threw #coldwater all over his #supporters who were #conned by him into believing massive #voterfraud #stole the #election away from him.
https://crooksandliars.com/2024/09/trump-admits-he-lost-2020-election-little