Also known as sea jellies, these gelatinous nonfish lack brains. As with terrestrial animals, such a wide spectrum of colouration is present in aquatic animals. but the deep-sea octopus Stauroteuthis syrtensis manages just fine. Read More…Īll images courtesy of Alexander Semenov, and are published with permission. Jellyfish are spectacular, rather baffling creatures, with extraterrestrial-like features and a penchant for extreme depths. To truly appreciate the wondrous beauty of life in the ocean, you have to see it at. My own goal is to study underwater life through camera lenses and to boost people’s interest in marine biology, sharing all my finding on social media and in real life through public lectures, exhibitions and media events. My team and I are used to diving in unfavourable and often harsh conditions where we successfully conduct complex research projects. I’m marine biologist, explorer and underwater photographer, head of the divers’ team at Moscow State University’s White sea biological station. The photographer’s lens captures any strange and unknown aquatic life in the ocean’s deep, from the tiniest sea worms to giant jellyfish. Please scroll down and enjoy! In Suruga Bay, not far from the Pacific coast of the Japanese island of Honsh, a 1.4m-long (4.6ft) slickhead fish weighing 25kg (55lb) was determined to be a new species in 2021. Doc Ricketts, one of Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute’s (MBARI) robotic rovers, sports powerful HD cameras and LED lights to detect and record marine life in the deep sea. For several years, Semenov and his team have been conducting scientific research diving in the harsh and unforgiving cold environment. Featured below are some of their rare findings in extremely bizarre images, yet stunningly gorgeous bursting with sharp, vivid colors. A robot camera on MBARI’s ocean rover caught some rare deep-sea creatures on film 3,200 feet under the sea. He is the head of the divers’ team at Moscow State University’s White Sea Biological Station located in the Artic Circle. Russian marine biologist and photographer Alexander Semenov has been capturing and documenting rare, beautiful deep-sea creatures.
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