About - Leonard Zell
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A diver surveys the depths - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Delicate gorgonian fans growing at the base of Mantis Reef - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Masked Boobies on Flinders Reef - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Lady Elliot Islands most famous dive site is the Blow Hole - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
A trip on a semi-submersible is a great way to see the reef for those not into diving or snorkelling - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Small fish facing into the current to catch passing planktonic food - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Flat worm ( Psuedoceros bimarginatus ) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Exploring swim-throughs - Swain Reefs - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
The coastline of Hook Island - Magnetic Island - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Noddy and crested terns nest on one of the cays - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Boats loading and unloading at bay.
A diver checks her depth gauge during one of the many safety stops - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Adapting to pressures from surge and waves is the Reeftop stubby coral - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Skeletal coral - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Pink anemonefish ( Amphiprion perideraion ) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Sea Snakes swimming in the Great Barrier Reef
Bounty Bay village and cavesite, Pitcairn Island
Colours of the sea, feather stars - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Petroglyphs on the rock face at the bottom of Down Rope are reminders of Pitcairns pre-bounty Polynesian inhabitants
Tube anemone ( F. Cerianthidae ) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
A giant clam (Tridacna gigas) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
A dive boat heads out from Grand Cayman, for a decent dive site travellers need not go out further than 50 odd feet.
Museum on Hiva Oa the most important island in the southern group, on the north-east coast Puamau has the most important archaeological remains dicovered to date in the Marquesas islands.
Bleached coral occurs when extreme temperatures, increased UV rays, disease, chemicals, silinity and exposure to air and rain at extreme low tides occur - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
A videographer films spiky soft coral - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Baitfish, pink anthias and anemonefish swimming amongst the tabletop and boulder coral off Whitsunday Island on the Great Barrier Reef.
Staghorn coral ( Acropora sp. ) - Great Barrier Reef - Queensland
Turret coral ( Tubastraea sp. ) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
A local sea urchin - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Zoanthid ( F. Zoanthidea ) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Divers and underwater wreckage.
Dangers of diving, Fire Coral ( Millepora ) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
The Olgas coral garden at Kelso Reef makes for some great panoramic shots - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Box jellies are found only along the coast and although the sting can be lethal, deaths by sea jellies is a rare occurance - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Local resident at Briggs Reef, the green turtle - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Green moon Wrasse fish(Thalassoma lunare)on the Great Barrier Reef.
A semicircle angelfish ( Mulloidichthys vanicolensis ) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Lace coral ( Stylaster sp. ) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
A many spotted Sweetlip with a school of hussars - Heron Island - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Most operators offer safe and professional dive courses - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Turtles in shallow water and tourists reef walking off Heron Island on the Great Barrier Reef.
Sea jellies, box jellies and Portuguese man-o-wars are prolific in the reef waters and all have dangerous tentacles that are loaded with stinging cells ( nematocysts ) where upon contact the stinging cells will " fire " and cut into the skin and inject venom - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Dominating the back reef crest at Michaelmas Reef are staghorns and soft corals - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Heading out for an evening dive - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Remaining flat due to low tides this " micro-atoll " is made up of corals and staghorn - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
The reef has some of the best, most accessible diving found anywhere in the world - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Usually attracted to shiny objects, such as jewellery and not the divers wearing them is the often maligned Barracuda - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
School of Blue Puller fish and Staghorn coral on the Great Barrier Reef.
The wreck of the Yongala and the coral covered davits that show the prolific life created - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
The timid stingray ( Taeniura spp. ) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
The turdish looking Sea Cucumber ( Thelanota anax ) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
A huge boulder coral dwarfing a snorkler - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Pitcairn island
Calmer waters for branching and plate staghorns - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Beach pool "Big Pool".
Red soft spiky coral ( Dendronephthya sp ) can be home to many other marine critters - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Fish with mouth open on the Great Barrier Reef.
Deep sediment covers the floor of the cave known as Mr Walker's - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Underwater scenes - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
People swimming just off Pukarua, one of the seventy-seven atolls in the Tuamotu Group
Common critters in these waters. A whale shark ( Rhincodon typus ) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Feeding damsels create a cloud above a staghorn clump - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Checking out the flora of the sea - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Village on coast.
Pitcairn Island
Barracuda cruising past a horse's tooth coral colony - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
School of Trevally fish on the Great Barrier Reef.
Underwater research - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Nesting seabirds at sunset on Flinders Reef - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Sunlight through the reef - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Sweetlip Emperor fish(Lethrinus Miniatus) on the Great Barrier Reef.
Carnivores and corals devour each other in competition for space - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Aerial view of Lady Elliot Island - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
The Great Barrier Reef waters extend from Lady Elliot Island in the south near Bundaberg, north to Bramble Cay and Black Rock in the Torres Strait almost to Papua New Guinea, Queensland
A Flounder ( Samariscus triocellatus ) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
The aptly named feather duster worm ( Protula sp. ) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Divers photographing on the Great Barrier Reef.
Aerial view of bay.
Six species of turtle are found in the reef and Coral Sea waters. Most common are green, hawksbill and loggerheads. A nesting female can lay from 50 to 150 eggs at a time - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Corallimorpharians use the same type of stinging cells as sea jellies although some are totally harmless, many will inflict painful stings and cause severe allergic reactions - Great barrier Reef, Queensland
Hump-headed Maori wrasse ( Cheilinus undulatus ) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Bristle worms are free-living polychaete, or many bristled worms. If touched the bristles will break off causing intense burning sensation of the skin - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Sweetlip Emperor fish(Lethrinus miniatus) on the Great Barrier Reef.
Christmas tree worm ( Spirobranchus giganteus ) - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Thousands of green turtles nest on the many coral cays each year - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
Night diving - Lady Musgrave Island - Great Barrier Reef, Queensland
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