Holy shit self found and lifer!! Saw him well at night, flew from ground into bushes very close
MASSIVE MUPPY!! Estimated 14.5 inches based on the size of my box. Dipnetted, photos comparing to smaller one caught and last photos underwater after release
On the crawl, after I accidentally scared it off the trail it just sat there in this pose and let me take all the macro photos I wanted
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Dead, washed ashore at Maidstone beach.
Finally!! Really pretty watersnake, found cruising on the side of a trail. Last pic as found
I was taking photos and scared it. It ran into to me and bit me on the nipple and wouldn’t let go. Here’s the news article https://www.the-sun.com/news/2169452/snorkeler-attacked-nurse-shark-nipple/
Big shoutout to Rich, Chris, and Billy at Caloosa Marina for getting it off of me.
Hurt a lot.
On the left (Atlantic rock crab on right), good comparison between Jonah and Atlantic rock crabs. Caught in lobster trap
Seen on barharborwhales demonstration lobster boat
Holy shit a conger?? Did not expect to find one of these
Flipped under rock with two rock gunnels, put in photo tank for pics and then released (last pic as flipped)
Gunnel!! One of my fave fish
Individual 1, flipped under rock with a second gunnel and an eel, put in photo tank for pics and then released (last pic as flipped)
Caught by a mangrove robin, was seen been repeatedly whipped and smacked against the branch!
The bog turtle is reportedly found only in Floyd Co, Va and two adjacent counties. Rarely seen, I rescued this male from the mouth of a dog and returned it to its place.
I am purposely leaving detailed location information our of this record. I am authorized to handle this species through New York DEC.
while photographing this Cuban Dwarf Boa it started to auto-hemorrhaging.
looked thin/possibly sick. parks department was on site and hopefully contacted the correct people
This snake was fishing for rainbow trout in a very tiny drying up puddle. The trout pictured managed to get away shortly after the photograph was taken. There were four or five fish in the puddle, so I'm sure the snake was eventually successful.
Lifer and first snake in NYC! Flipped under trash, last pic as flipped
holy shit !!!!!! Lifer, my favorite Long Island animal i’ve seen
Found in the open near road, last pics as found/habitat
trying to identify some fish observed while seining. help is welcome
Hell yea Manhattan desmognathus!! Lifer, put too much effort into finding this creature. Flipped under rock in stream, photos as flipped (didn’t bother it past pics) and last is habitat
Falcon by Thomas Circle eating a dove
Some type of warbler? We were doing survey in the middle of the ocean near Dry Tortugas National Park and this little buddy hung out with us for 4-5 hours before regaining his energy and continuing on his way to wherever he was going. Gave it water - what a day!
Gulf toadfish, calling out.
Recorded (very elegantly) by.... affixing my underwater camera on the end of a fishing pole and recording footage.
Wild tagged condor perching on sign by the side of the paved road.
On August 16, we witnessed what has to rank with one of the most incredible wildlife experiences I’ve ever had. Cheryl and I were on a trip with 6 other nature photographers and our leader. We had been in the Pantanal area of Brazil for about a week with 5 days along the Cuiaba River near Porto Jofre, looking for Jaguars and other photo ops. Our daily routine was breakfast at 5:30 AM and we took off on boats from 6 till about 11AM, lunch at noon at the lodge, then on the boats again 3PM till dark. Our group has 3 boats so just 3 people per boat so plenty of room for photo gear, etc. Over several days we had seen 10-12 Jaguars. Some were very good photo ops, some poor photo ops, some just glimpsed.
There are several lodges in the area and it is a popular place to visit for folks hoping to see Jaguars, so much like Yellowstone National Park, a crowd can gather when some significant wildlife is seen, but instead of car jams to see a Grizzly such as Yellowstone, this can be boat jams for a jaguar. I have seen as many as 22 boats, 70-100 feet off shore with lots of people in each boat taking photos of a sleeping Jaguar. BUT…that is not the end of the story! We were often in more remote areas of the rivers and inlets and streams more or less on our own looking for birds, etc., so lots of times there are no other boats around. The boat drivers all have radios, so if a Jaguar is seen, other boats are informed. We move 20-25 miles up and down the river to explore, so many times other boats are not close enough to arrive while a Jaguar is in view.
My limited Jaguar experience is that some are just sleeping and/or resting and mostly ignore the boats in the river. Others are walking though the edge of the forest near the river and when a boat becomes visible, the animal just vanishes back into the forest. This morning at about 7:30 AM our three boats were in an out-of-the way location, a mile or so apart. The boat I was in was photographing a Great Black Hawk when one of our other boats called us on the radio to say they had a Jaguar swimming in the river, apparently hunting, so we headed to that area. Apparently the Jaguar, with just its head visible, swam up to loafing Yacare Caimans and pounced onto a caiman which was about 6 or so feet long. The Jaguar and the caiman thrashed in the water with the Jaguar biting into the skull of the caiman. That is about the time our boat arrived, after the Jaguar had mostly subdued the caiman, but the caiman was still thrashing about. The Jaguar was up against a high dirt bank, still mostly in the water with a firm grip on the skull of the caiman and the Jaguar was not letting go. It was very dark and under heavy foliage and vines so I was shooting at 4000 and 6400 ISO but that was my only choice. Eventually the Jaguar was able to work itself and its prize away from the vines and it drug the caiman out of the water and up the dirt bank and eventually back into the forest to enjoy its catch beyond the curious and amazed eyes of the human observers. The caiman was as large or larger than the Jaguar. All I have to say is that a mature Jaguar is an incredibly powerful predator and watching this whole 15 minute episode is something I’ll not forget. What a beast!
This entire series was shot from a boat, perhaps 40 feet off the bank with a Canon EOS 7D Mark II and a Canon 100-400 IS lens in case anyone is interested.
Cuiaba River,
near Porto Jofre,
Pantanal,
Brazil
16 August 2017
Amazon River Dolphins or Botos (Inia geoffrensis) Mother and Calf underwater in Flooded Forest, Rio Negro, Amazonia, Brazil
A green chiton attached to a half crab. We observed this alien looking commensal beast while undertaking an intertidal survey on the reefs off Hawera. It made us jump when we first turned over the rock.
Lifer!! Thankfully on protected land. Under fallen Eastern White Pine log/branch in an upland mixed forest.
Worcester County, Massachusetts. 3/27/2022