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  • Dusky shark (Carcharhinus obscurus) a species of requiem shark, in the family Carcharhinidae, occurring in tropical and warm-temperate continental seas worldwide. A generalist apex predator, the dusky shark can be found from the coast to the outer continental shelf and adjacent pelagic waters. Photographed in the  Mediterranean sea off the coast of Hadera, Israel
    HN_Dusky-shark_HN59659.jpg
  • Arabian Picasso triggerfish (Rhinecanthus assasi). The Arabian Picasso triggerfish is found in shallow, sandy areas of coral reefs in the western Indian Ocean. It feeds on small invertebrates, such as crustaceans, and may reach a length of 30 centimetres. Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    BT_f_triggerfish_2897.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in March of the Hadera shore, Israel
    HN_Shark_HGI1930.jpg
  • Dusky shark (Carcharhinus obscurus) a species of requiem shark, in the family Carcharhinidae, occurring in tropical and warm-temperate continental seas worldwide. A generalist apex predator, the dusky shark can be found from the coast to the outer continental shelf and adjacent pelagic waters. Photographed in the  Mediterranean sea off the coast of Hadera, Israel
    HN_Dusky-shark_HN59671.jpg
  • Dusky shark (Carcharhinus obscurus) a species of requiem shark, in the family Carcharhinidae, occurring in tropical and warm-temperate continental seas worldwide. A generalist apex predator, the dusky shark can be found from the coast to the outer continental shelf and adjacent pelagic waters. Photographed in the  Mediterranean sea off the coast of Hadera, Israel
    HN_Dusky-shark_HN59666.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in March of the Hadera shore, Israel
    HN_f_Shark_HGI1914.jpg
  • Arabian Picasso triggerfish (Rhinecanthus assasi). The Arabian Picasso triggerfish is found in shallow, sandy areas of coral reefs in the western Indian Ocean. It feeds on small invertebrates, such as crustaceans, and may reach a length of 30 centimetres. Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    BT_f_triggerfish_2894.jpg
  • Dusky shark (Carcharhinus obscurus) a species of requiem shark, in the family Carcharhinidae, occurring in tropical and warm-temperate continental seas worldwide. A generalist apex predator, the dusky shark can be found from the coast to the outer continental shelf and adjacent pelagic waters. Photographed in the  Mediterranean sea off the coast of Hadera, Israel
    HN_Dusky-shark_HN59956.jpg
  • Dusky shark (Carcharhinus obscurus) a species of requiem shark, in the family Carcharhinidae, occurring in tropical and warm-temperate continental seas worldwide. A generalist apex predator, the dusky shark can be found from the coast to the outer continental shelf and adjacent pelagic waters. Photographed in the  Mediterranean sea off the coast of Hadera, Israel
    HN_Dusky-shark_HN59658.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in March of the Hadera shore, Israel
    HN_Shark_HGI2064.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in March of the Hadera shore, Israel
    HN_Shark_HGI2063.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in March of the Hadera shore, Israel
    HN_f_Shark_HGI1981.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in March of the Hadera shore, Israel
    HN_m_Shark_HGI2268.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in March of the Hadera shore, Israel
    HN_Shark_HGI2111.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in March of the Hadera shore, Israel
    HN_Shark_HGI2085.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in March of the Hadera shore, Israel
    HN_Shark_HGI1828.jpg
  • Soft coral, hard coral full of Fish, underwater scenery at a Coral reef in the Red Sea Eilat, Israel
    BT_f_Reef_2903.jpg
  • Commercial divers attach a zinc anode to a brine discharge pipe from a desalination plant on the seabed to a distance of 300 meter from the shore. Zinc anodes are attached to underwater metal parts to reduce corrosion. Brine discharge can have a negative impact on the ocean ecosystem. Photographed in Israel Mediterranean sea. Photographed in the Mediterranean Sea, Israel
    HN_Brine-discharge-pipe_7476.jpg
  • A Trumpetfish, Aulostomus maculatus, whose maximum length is 100 cm (3 ft 3 in) and which has many color phases and patterns. They prey on small fish and crustaceans. Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    TP_trumpetfish_9545.jpg
  • Blue-spotted stingray (Taeniura lymma) head. The eyes are the raised bumps, and the mouth is on the underside of the head region of this flattened body. One of the spiracles (breathing structures) is below and left of the nearer eye). The two spiracles are used to obtain oxygen from the water. This ray, also called the blue-spotted fantail or ribbontail ray, inhabits the oceans of the Indo-Pacific. It reaches lengths of around 70 centimetres, feeding in shallow sandy areas on molluscs, worms, shrimps and crabs. Photographed in the Red Sea, at Ras Mohammed National Park, Sinai, Egypt,
    HN_Underwater_5040.jpg
  • Israel, Dead Sea, salt crystalization caused by water evaporation
    RL_f_Dead-Sea_7263.jpg
  • Soft coral, hard coral full of Fish, underwater scenery at a Coral reef in the Red Sea Eilat, Israel
    BT_f_Reef_2915.jpg
  • Soft coral, hard coral full of Fish, underwater scenery at a Coral reef in the Red Sea Eilat, Israel
    BT_f_Reef_2914.jpg
  • Israel, Dead Sea, salt crystalization caused by water evaporation
    DN_f_Dead-Sea_P1300204.jpg
  • Israel, Dead Sea, salt crystalization caused by water evaporation
    DN_f_Dead-Sea_DSCF7436_7858.jpg
  • Israel, Dead Sea, salt crystalization caused by water evaporation
    DN_f_Dead-Sea_DSCF7138.jpg
  • Diver at the MS Zenobia shipwreck. MS Zenobia was a Swedish built Challenger-class RO-RO ferry launched in 1979 that capsized and sank close to Larnaca, Cyprus, in June 1980 on her maiden voyage. She now rests on her port side in approximately 42 meters (138 ft) of water and was named as one of The Times top ten wreck diving sites in the world in 2003.
    HN_SCUBA_zenobia-38.jpg
  • Diver at the MS Zenobia shipwreck. MS Zenobia was a Swedish built Challenger-class RO-RO ferry launched in 1979 that capsized and sank close to Larnaca, Cyprus, in June 1980 on her maiden voyage. She now rests on her port side in approximately 42 meters (138 ft) of water and was named as one of The Times top ten wreck diving sites in the world in 2003.
    HN_SCUBA_zenobia-29.jpg
  • Diver at the MS Zenobia shipwreck. MS Zenobia was a Swedish built Challenger-class RO-RO ferry launched in 1979 that capsized and sank close to Larnaca, Cyprus, in June 1980 on her maiden voyage. She now rests on her port side in approximately 42 meters (138 ft) of water and was named as one of The Times top ten wreck diving sites in the world in 2003.
    HN_SCUBA_zenobia-14.jpg
  • Commercial divers attach a zinc anode to a brine discharge pipe from a desalination plant on the seabed to a distance of 300 meter from the shore. Zinc anodes are attached to underwater metal parts to reduce corrosion. Brine discharge can have a negative impact on the ocean ecosystem. Photographed in Israel Mediterranean sea. Photographed in the Mediterranean Sea, Israel
    HN_Brine-discharge-pipe_7447.jpg
  • The common stingray (Dasyatis pastinaca) is a species of stingray in the family Dasyatidae, found in the northeastern Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean and Black Seas. It typically inhabits sandy or muddy habitats in coastal waters shallower than 60 m (200 ft), often burying itself in sediment. Usually measuring 45 cm (18 in) across,
    HN_common-stingray_1.jpg
  • a mother Bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) swims with her cub in the red sea
    TP_dolphin_cub_6334.jpg
  • Bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) swimming away from the pack to make eye contact with the camera Photographed at Sa'ab Ali reef, Sinai, Red sea
    TP_dolphin_2757.jpg
  • Striped eel catfish. Shoal of striped catfish (Plotosus lineatus). These fish inhabit the tropical waters of the Indo-Pacific region. Unlike most catfish they are not tolerant of fresh water, and rarely if ever enter rivers. They may reach a length of up to 30 centimetres when mature. These fish have poisonous spines in their fins which deter predators. This species is one of the many Lessepsian migrants who have migrated from the Red Sea to the Mediterranean Sea via the Suez Canal Photographed in the Mediterranean Sea off the shore of Israel
    HN_Dive-Nakaz_6216.jpg
  • Giant clam (Tridacna gigas). This is the largest living bivalve mollusc, the shells of mature individuals reaching 1.5 metres in length. The giant clam can filter microscopic plants and animals from the water, but it obtains most of its food from photosynthetic symbiotic algae which live in its tissues. Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    HN_110203_Eilat_7071.jpg
  • Underwater photography of a Goby fish Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    HN_110203_Eilat_6963.jpg
  • Day Octopus (Octopus cyanea). (order Octopoda). close up of the head and eyes. This marine invertebrate is a cephalopod mollusc. The octopus has a large brain and well-developed eyes. Eight tentacles form a ring around its mouth (a horny beak, not seen). It swims by jet propulsion with its body sac (upper left), or it crawls over rock surfaces. It lives in a cave or a crevice in rocks, emerging to hunt. Its prey is mostly crabs and lobsters, which it paralyses by injecting a poison. Some octopuses can reach a length of over one metre. Octopuses can vary their skin colour and may eject a cloud of ink when alarmed. Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    HN_110203_Eilat_6862.jpg
  • Under water photography of a Frogfish, family Antennariidae, a type of anglerfish in the order Lophiiformes. Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    HN_110202_Eilat_7514.jpg
  • Under water photography of Sea lily (order Crinoidea) closeup. The sea lily, or crinoid, has feathery arms which trap food particles from the water. The particles are then passed to the mouth along the arms. The sea lily is sessile, remaining in one place for its entire adult life, bonded to its substrate by a stalk. Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    HN_110202_Eilat_7430.jpg
  • Arabian Picasso triggerfish (Rhinecanthus assasi). The Arabian Picasso triggerfish is found in shallow, sandy areas of coral reefs in the western Indian Ocean. It feeds on small invertebrates, such as crustaceans, and may reach a length of 30 centimetres. Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    HN_110202_Eilat_7309.jpg
  • Coral Reef Ras Mohammed National Park, Red Sea, Sinai, Egypt,
    HN_Underwater_5048.jpg
  • Sea lily (order Crinoidea) closeup. The sea lily, or crinoid, has feathery arms which trap food particles from the water. The particles are then passed to the mouth along the arms. The sea lily is sessile, remaining in one place for its entire adult life, bonded to its substrate by a stalk. Photographed at the Ras Mohammed National Park, Red Sea, Sinai, Egypt,
    HN_Underwater_4841.jpg
  • Slate pencil sea urchin (Heterocentrotus sp.) on a reef. The sea urchin is a marine invertebrate of the phylum Echinodermata that includes starfish. Like a starfish, a sea urchin has five-fold radial symmetry. The arms have fused to form a spherical shell from which protective spines protrude. Here, the spines are thick to withstand the turbulent water of its shallow water habitat. This urchin is named for the fact that its spines were used to write on blackboards. A sea urchin uses tube feet on its underside to crawl over rocks. Its mouth is also on its underside, and its five jaws scrape up algae (microscopic plants) growing on the rock. Photographed at the Ras Mohammed National Park, Red Sea, Sinai, Egypt,
    HN_Underwater_4835.jpg
  • dusky batfish (Platax pinnatus). This fish, also called the red-faced batfish, inhabits reefs in the tropical Indo-Pacific region, from the Red Sea to the Pacific islands. It feeds on algae, small fish and invertebrates, and can reach a length of around 50 centimetres.  Photographed at the Ras Mohammed National Park, Red Sea, Sinai, Egypt,
    HN_Underwater_4152.jpg
  • Soft coral (Order Alcyonacea). Corals are small colonial invertebrate animals. Individual polyps may join together to make large structures, which are the basis of coral reefs. Soft corals differ from hard corals in that there is no hard calcium skeleton laid down. Instead the polyps are connected by spongy tubes, which are strengthened by small calcium carbonate fragments called sclerites. Each soft coral polyp (at the ends of the branches) has eight tentacles with which it filters food from the water. Photographed at Ras Mohammed National Park, Red Sea, Sinai, Egypt,
    HN_Underwater_4111.jpg
  • Scuba Divers pass by a coral reef fan coral in the foreground photographed at Ras Mohammed National Park, Red Sea, Sinai, Egypt,
    HN_Underwater_5125.jpg
  • Diver at a shipwreck at Ras Mohammed National Park, Red Sea, Sinai, Egypt,
    HN_Underwater_4623.jpg
  • dusky batfish (Platax pinnatus). This fish, also called the red-faced batfish, inhabits reefs in the tropical Indo-Pacific region, from the Red Sea to the Pacific islands. It feeds on algae, small fish and invertebrates, and can reach a length of around 50 centimetres.  Photographed at the Ras Mohammed National Park, Red Sea, Sinai, Egypt,
    HN_Underwater_4175.jpg
  • Scuba divers ascend slowly from a dive. Decompression stations are marked on the rope for a controlled ascend photographed at Ras Mohammed National Park, Red Sea, Sinai, Egypt,
    HN_Underwater_4671.jpg
  • Reef Stonefish (Synanceia verrucosa) camouflaged among coral. Its eye is seen at centre. This solitary fish inhabits reefs of the Indo- Pacific region, indistinguishable from the rocks amongst which it hides. The stonefish feeds on smaller fish and crustaceans, and grows up to 40 centimetres in length. The fins along its back (not seen) contain poisonous spines, used in defence. It is the world's most poisonous fish and can be fatal to humans unless a serum is applied immediately. Photographed in the Ras Mohammed National Park, Red Sea, Sinai, Egypt,
    HN_Underwater_4911.jpg
  • Water drips from a salt formation forming, due to water evaporation, in the Dead Sea, Israel
    AM_f_671A3848.jpg
  • Israel, Dead Sea, salt crystalization caused by water evaporation
    RL_f_Dead-Sea_7296.jpg
  • Israel, Dead Sea, salt crystalization caused by water evaporation
    RL_f_Dead-Sea_7295.jpg
  • Israel, Dead Sea, salt crystalization caused by water evaporation
    RL_f_Dead-Sea_7293.jpg
  • Israel, Dead Sea, salt crystalization caused by water evaporation
    RL_f_Dead-Sea_7294.jpg
  • Israel, Dead Sea, salt crystalization caused by water evaporation
    RL_f_Dead-Sea_7276.jpg
  • Israel, Dead Sea, salt crystalization caused by water evaporation
    RL_f_Dead-Sea_7260.jpg
  • Soft coral, hard coral full of Fish, underwater scenery at a Coral reef in the Red Sea Eilat, Israel
    BT_f_Reef_3174.jpg
  • Soft coral, hard coral full of Fish, underwater scenery at a Coral reef in the Red Sea Eilat, Israel
    BT_f_Reef_2923.jpg
  • Soft coral, hard coral full of Fish, underwater scenery at a Coral reef in the Red Sea Eilat, Israel
    BT_f_Reef_2922.jpg
  • Soft coral, hard coral full of Fish, underwater scenery at a Coral reef in the Red Sea Eilat, Israel
    BT_f_Reef_2921.jpg
  • Soft coral, hard coral full of Fish, underwater scenery at a Coral reef in the Red Sea Eilat, Israel
    BT_f_Reef_2916.jpg
  • Soft coral, hard coral full of Fish, underwater scenery at a Coral reef in the Red Sea Eilat, Israel
    BT_f_Reef_2901.jpg
  • Israel, Dead Sea, salt crystalization caused by water evaporation
    DN_f_Dead-Sea_P1300205.jpg
  • Israel, Dead Sea, salt crystalization caused by water evaporation
    DN_f_Dead-Sea_P1260212.jpg
  • Israel, Dead Sea, fisheye view of salt crystalization caused by water evaporation
    DN_f_Dead-Sea_DSCF0587.jpg
  • Israel, Dead Sea, salt crystalization caused by water evaporation. A group of photographers photographing the scene
    DN_f_Dead-Sea_7204_6818.jpg
  • Digitally generated image of a mounted fish trophy on a wooden plaque
    IR_f_Trophy-fish-11.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in February of the Hadera shore, Israel The tracking tag can be seen on the shark's fin
    HN_Shark_HGI_7657.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in February of the Hadera shore, Israel
    HN_Shark_HGI_7782.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in February of the Hadera shore, Israel
    HN_Shark_HGI_7754.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in February of the Hadera shore, Israel The tracking tag can be seen on the shark's fin
    HN_Shark_HGI_7690.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in February of the Hadera shore, Israel
    HN_Shark_HGI_7640.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in February of the Hadera shore, Israel
    HN_Shark_HGI_7617.jpg
  • Researchers are tagging a sandbar shark (Carcharhinus plumbeus) in the Mediterranean sea. In recent years this shark has become more common in the Mediterranean especially near power plants hot water outlets. Photographed in February of the Hadera shore, Israel
    HN_Shark_HGI_7618.jpg
  • Under water photography of a Red Sea or two-banded clownfish (Amphiprion bicinctus) in a Sea Anemone (Actiniaria) Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    HN_m_Red-Sea_HGI1284.jpg
  • Jelly fish floats in the water
    FK_f_Sea_181.jpg
  • Diver at the MS Zenobia shipwreck. MS Zenobia was a Swedish built Challenger-class RO-RO ferry launched in 1979 that capsized and sank close to Larnaca, Cyprus, in June 1980 on her maiden voyage. She now rests on her port side in approximately 42 meters (138 ft) of water and was named as one of The Times top ten wreck diving sites in the world in 2003.
    HN_SCUBA_zenobia-47.jpg
  • Diver at the MS Zenobia shipwreck. MS Zenobia was a Swedish built Challenger-class RO-RO ferry launched in 1979 that capsized and sank close to Larnaca, Cyprus, in June 1980 on her maiden voyage. She now rests on her port side in approximately 42 meters (138 ft) of water and was named as one of The Times top ten wreck diving sites in the world in 2003.
    HN_SCUBA_zenobia-40.jpg
  • Diver at the MS Zenobia shipwreck. MS Zenobia was a Swedish built Challenger-class RO-RO ferry launched in 1979 that capsized and sank close to Larnaca, Cyprus, in June 1980 on her maiden voyage. She now rests on her port side in approximately 42 meters (138 ft) of water and was named as one of The Times top ten wreck diving sites in the world in 2003.
    HN_SCUBA_zenobia-32.jpg
  • Diver at the MS Zenobia shipwreck. MS Zenobia was a Swedish built Challenger-class RO-RO ferry launched in 1979 that capsized and sank close to Larnaca, Cyprus, in June 1980 on her maiden voyage. She now rests on her port side in approximately 42 meters (138 ft) of water and was named as one of The Times top ten wreck diving sites in the world in 2003.
    HN_SCUBA_zenobia-26.jpg
  • Diver at the MS Zenobia shipwreck. MS Zenobia was a Swedish built Challenger-class RO-RO ferry launched in 1979 that capsized and sank close to Larnaca, Cyprus, in June 1980 on her maiden voyage. She now rests on her port side in approximately 42 meters (138 ft) of water and was named as one of The Times top ten wreck diving sites in the world in 2003.
    HN_SCUBA_zenobia-23.jpg
  • Diver at the MS Zenobia shipwreck. MS Zenobia was a Swedish built Challenger-class RO-RO ferry launched in 1979 that capsized and sank close to Larnaca, Cyprus, in June 1980 on her maiden voyage. She now rests on her port side in approximately 42 meters (138 ft) of water and was named as one of The Times top ten wreck diving sites in the world in 2003.
    HN_SCUBA_zenobia-13.jpg
  • Commercial divers attach a zinc anode to a brine discharge pipe from a desalination plant on the seabed to a distance of 300 meter from the shore. Zinc anodes are attached to underwater metal parts to reduce corrosion. Brine discharge can have a negative impact on the ocean ecosystem. Photographed in Israel Mediterranean sea. Photographed in the Mediterranean Sea, Israel
    HN_Brine-discharge-pipe_7532.jpg
  • Commercial divers attach a zinc anode to a brine discharge pipe from a desalination plant on the seabed to a distance of 300 meter from the shore. Zinc anodes are attached to underwater metal parts to reduce corrosion. Brine discharge can have a negative impact on the ocean ecosystem. Photographed in Israel Mediterranean sea. Photographed in the Mediterranean Sea, Israel
    HN_Brine-discharge-pipe_7514.jpg
  • Commercial divers attach a zinc anode to a brine discharge pipe from a desalination plant on the seabed to a distance of 300 meter from the shore. Zinc anodes are attached to underwater metal parts to reduce corrosion. Brine discharge can have a negative impact on the ocean ecosystem. Photographed in Israel Mediterranean sea. Photographed in the Mediterranean Sea, Israel
    HN_Brine-discharge-pipe_7498.jpg
  • Commercial divers attach a zinc anode to a brine discharge pipe from a desalination plant on the seabed to a distance of 300 meter from the shore. Zinc anodes are attached to underwater metal parts to reduce corrosion. Brine discharge can have a negative impact on the ocean ecosystem. Photographed in Israel Mediterranean sea. Photographed in the Mediterranean Sea, Israel
    HN_Brine-discharge-pipe_7460.jpg
  • Zinc anode on the ocean floor. Sacrificial Zinc anodes are attached to underwater metal parts to reduce corrosion
    HN_Brine-discharge-pipe_7424.jpg
  • Marine life photography. Stingray in Jordan, golf of Aqaba
    GE_Aqaba-Jordan_6695.jpg
  • Redcoat - Sargocentron rubrum - Found in coastal reefs or wrecks in lagoons, bays, or harbors. Spine of preopercle venomous Photographed in the Mediterranean Coast Israel
    HN_marine_HGS4390.jpg
  • Striped eel catfish. Shoal of striped catfish (Plotosus lineatus). These fish inhabit the tropical waters of the Indo-Pacific region. Unlike most catfish they are not tolerant of fresh water, and rarely if ever enter rivers. They may reach a length of up to 30 centimetres when mature. These fish have poisonous spines in their fins which deter predators. This species is one of the many Lessepsian migrants who have migrated from the Red Sea to the Mediterranean Sea via the Suez Canal Photographed in the Mediterranean Sea off the shore of Israel
    HN_marine_HGS4378.jpg
  • Striped eel catfish. Shoal of striped catfish (Plotosus lineatus). These fish inhabit the tropical waters of the Indo-Pacific region. Unlike most catfish they are not tolerant of fresh water, and rarely if ever enter rivers. They may reach a length of up to 30 centimetres when mature. These fish have poisonous spines in their fins which deter predators. This species is one of the many Lessepsian migrants who have migrated from the Red Sea to the Mediterranean Sea via the Suez Canal Photographed in the Mediterranean Sea off the shore of Israel
    HN_marine_HGS4377.jpg
  • Redcoat - Sargocentron rubrum - Found in coastal reefs or wrecks in lagoons, bays, or harbors. Spine of preopercle venomous Photographed in the Mediterranean Coast Israel
    HN_marine_HGS4404.jpg
  • The common stingray (Dasyatis pastinaca) is a species of stingray in the family Dasyatidae, found in the northeastern Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean and Black Seas. It typically inhabits sandy or muddy habitats in coastal waters shallower than 60 m (200 ft), often burying itself in sediment. Usually measuring 45 cm (18 in) across,
    HN_common-stingray_5.jpg
  • The common stingray (Dasyatis pastinaca) is a species of stingray in the family Dasyatidae, found in the northeastern Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean and Black Seas. It typically inhabits sandy or muddy habitats in coastal waters shallower than 60 m (200 ft), often burying itself in sediment. Usually measuring 45 cm (18 in) across,
    HN_common-stingray_2.jpg
  • Striped eel catfish. Shoal of striped catfish (Plotosus lineatus). These fish inhabit the tropical waters of the Indo-Pacific region. Unlike most catfish they are not tolerant of fresh water, and rarely if ever enter rivers. They may reach a length of up to 30 centimetres when mature. These fish have poisonous spines in their fins which deter predators. This species is one of the many Lessepsian migrants who have migrated from the Red Sea to the Mediterranean Sea via the Suez Canal Photographed in the Mediterranean Sea off the shore of Israel
    HN_20110125_6542.jpg
  • A Trumpetfish, Aulostomus maculatus, whose maximum length is 100 cm (3 ft 3 in) and which has many color phases and patterns. They prey on small fish and crustaceans. Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    HN_r_1102_Eilat_7370.jpg
  • Striped eel catfish. Shoal of striped catfish (Plotosus lineatus). These fish inhabit the tropical waters of the Indo-Pacific region. Unlike most catfish they are not tolerant of fresh water, and rarely if ever enter rivers. They may reach a length of up to 30 centimetres when mature. These fish have poisonous spines in their fins which deter predators. This species is one of the many Lessepsian migrants who have migrated from the Red Sea to the Mediterranean Sea via the Suez Canal Photographed in the Mediterranean Sea off the shore of Israel
    HN_Dive-Nakaz_6195.jpg
  • Underwater photography of a crab Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    HN_110203_Eilat_7130.jpg
  • Under water photography of a Reticulate moray (Muraena retifera) Photographed in the Red Sea Israel
    HN_110203_Eilat_7067.jpg
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