Take you to see below sea level
The Blue Planet has another 71%
Photographed in the Raja Vivi Islands, Indonesia
Lead
The most expansive of the "blue planet" on which we live is the ocean, which accounts for about 71% of the Earth's surface. Since my graduation trip to college, I got my diving license, and since then I have fallen in love with the sport of diving, and I have been out of control, and every year I will go to Southeast Asia to play during the long holidays of May Day and Eleven. So today Xiaobian will take you to see the magnificent world below sea level!
Photographed in Bali, Indonesia
Part 1.
With nervousness and excitement, put on the goggles, put on the fins, bite the breath regulator, and jump into the sea to prepare for the dive. The world below the surface of the sea will bring you a completely different feeling, once just treading water on the seashore, watching the sunrise and sunset, there was such a wonderful world under the sparkling sea level, and the scenery is completely different from the land, and it will come into view.
Photographed in Ryukyu
The horizon is much wider than expected, and it acts like an "arbitrary gate" that takes you out of the hustle and bustle of the city and into a quiet enchantment. The first glimpse of the true depth of the "blue planet" was glimpsed, and the perception of it changed drastically at this moment. The world seems bigger, and when we look at something from a different perspective, we see more.
Photographed in the Raja Vivi Islands, Indonesia
Part 2.
This is a candy crab that lives in soft corals, they live in symbiosis with corals, living quietly under the protection of corals. Corals provide a space for many marine life to live on, not only crabs, but also familiar clownfish, various coral reef fish, shrimp, bean seahorses, sea hares and so on.
Coral reef life
Photographed in the Raja Vivi Islands, Indonesia
Photographed in Dumaguete, Philippines
This is a gentle longtail shark, in the Philippines Malapascua Island (Malapascua Island, divers all call its harmonic name Mama Pat Loofah Island), there is a special dive site to see them, get up at 4 o'clock every morning, go to sea at 5 o'clock, more than half an hour boat can reach, long-tail sharks appear here almost every morning to feed and clean their bodies, divers can quietly admire their beautiful figures underwater.
Photographed on Malapascua Island in the Philippines
Trivia
Q: Do sharks eat people?
A: There are more than 300 kinds of sharks in the world, they rarely attack humans, in fact, they do not like to eat people, because they like marine mammals with thick subcutaneous fat, such as seals, sea lions, cetaceans and other large fish, or tuna, sailfish and other large fish, human flesh may be "too chai" for them. Sharks are mostly gentle.
This is Mr. Turtle, who is missing a "leg", and I don't know what kind of suffering it has suffered before, whether it was injured by the oars or bitten by other animals? Fortunately, the wound has healed, and it seems that it has adapted to the "three-legged" life and can still swim freely on the bottom of the sea.
Photographed on the Philippine island of Bohol
This is a sea urchin holding a toothpaste skin as a cover, and when I saw it at the bottom of the sea, I tried to take this toothpaste skin off, thinking of bringing it back to the sea and throwing it back to the trash can, but it was too tight to take it off, so I had to give up. As the scope of people's production and life becomes larger, the garbage we produce is also affecting the oceans. So, remember to reduce the use of plastic products and take care of the marine environment!
Photographed in Dumaguete, Philippines
Trivia
Q: Why do sea urchins like to catch garbage?
A: From a scientific point of view to explain, the sea urchin grasping camouflage is judged by the shading effect, although the sea urchin has no eyes, the sea urchin's tube foot has the ability to sense light, can judge the transmittance of the captured object, and artificial garbage usually has a certain degree of opacity, such as aluminum foil, plastic, waterproof paper, cloth, etc., compared to photosynthetic algae, the effect of opaque light is higher, so the sea urchin chose garbage as his cover.
Photographed in Bali, Indonesia
epilogue
As a "retired diver" editor who has dived for hundreds of times, he has not stepped out of the country for almost three years because of the epidemic, and hopes that the epidemic will end as soon as possible and people can resume normal work and life! Facing the sea, spring blossoms!
Picture 丨 Amberno
Edited by 丨 Amberno