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Seaslugs - Part I. Headshield slugs and Sea hares.
by Ákos Lumnitzer added 2004-11-24
I have compiled a sequential account of the five main seaslug orders, supported by photographic records and some likely Sydney dive sites to encounter members of each order.
Seaslugs - Part II. Sidegill slugs and Sap-sucking slugs
by Ákos Lumnitzer added 2004-11-23
In this article I will introduce you to the next two in hierarchical sequence. Seaslugs are indeed fascinating creatures and are a favorite for many photographers. They do not move about very quickly at all, which is a characteristic that makes them easy subjects to shoot. Often it is not the case of 'the one that got away', but the case of 'Oh no! I have run out of film again!'.
Seaslugs - Part III. Nudibranchs
by Ákos Lumnitzer added 2004-11-23
I wish I had a pound for every time I heard a diver say: 'Did you see the beautiful nudibranch down there?' - not knowing, that the creature was only another opistobranch and not a true nudie?
See no evil, hear no evil, tell dad bloody nuthin
by BAT added 2004-11-16

As most of you know I am an instructor and we teach open water students the basics in confined water. Well I, along with a lot of others, utilize the local pool before going to the bay for the open water component. My little adventure takes place during one of those pool sessions.

Restoring a Fishery - With Dugongs
by Tim Hochgrebe added 2004-11-11
In an imaginative approach to fisheries renewal a Thai scientist is using the dugong as the centerpiece of his campaign to restore fishing livelihoods and coastal ecosystems. Julian Cribb reports.
Papua New Guinea, A Kaleidoscope
by Scuba Diver Australasia added 2004-11-03
The country has a wonderful feeling that you cannot find anywhere else in the world. There is so much in Papua New Guinea to experience as it is widely spread out and diverse.
If Looks Could Kill
by Scuba Diver Australasia added 2004-11-03
If looks could kill, the whale shark would be the most deadly creature in the sea. Up to 14 metres in length, weighing as much as 20 tonnes, and sporting hundreds of teeth, it is outclassed in size only by the true whales.
Diving Indonesia
by Scuba Diver Australasia added 2004-11-03
The tropical seas from the shores of East Africa, the Red Sea, through to South East Asia and then eastward to Australia, the Solomons and extending to the islands of Hawaiian Islands is the worlds richest marine province.
Encounters with Grey Nurse Sharks - A diving adventure
by kerryb added 2004-09-26
Of all the books I have ever read on Australian dive sites all of them list South West Rocks, more specifically Fish Rock Cave in New South Wales as a premier diving spot with the longest underwater sea cave in the Southern Hemisphere and of course the resident Grey Nurse Sharks.
Night Dive Surprise
by BAT added 2004-09-26
I am an instructor with an unnamed association, a divemaster with another and an adv/EANx, decompression procedures with another. Who cares? Exactly. Just shingles to hang on the study wall. Looks impressive though. I would like to share a night dive with you.
Kakaban, Primordial Sea
by Scuba Diver Australasia added 2004-09-25
Drawing a deep breath, I dive into a primordial sea. My vision opens to a sea of jellies swimming gracefully in a green aquaria, visibility remaining clear at 5m as long as I am careful not to touch bottom and stir up the silt accumulated over the last 19,000 years.
White's Seahorse
by Scuba Diver Australasia added 2004-09-25
The White's Seahorse (Hippocampus whitei) is a shy species that belongs to the syngnathidae family that includes pipefish, seahorses and seadragons.
Ewens Pond, South Australia
by Scuba Diver Australasia added 2004-09-19
Mt. Gambier in South Australia is a region filled with stunning freshwater lakes filtered by limestone, cave diving and extinct volcanoes. For divers without Cave qualifications Ewens Ponds beckons.
Great White, great diving
by Scuba Diver Australasia added 2004-09-19
This was my first time diving with Calypso Star Charters and Captain Rolf who had come highly recommended.
Shooting Beneath the Ice
by Scuba Diver Australasia added 2004-09-19
Antarctica..... the coldest and windiest continent. My first voyage, my first photographic journey to the ultimate wilderness on earth was filled with aspirations and dreams.
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