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DUK10125911_058
REPORTAGE - Costa Rica
Giants crocodiles (Crocodylus acutus) rest on the bank of Rio Tarcoles. Costa Rica. American crocodile (Crocodylus acutus). Central America, Costa Rica, Puntarenas, Carara. (Photo by Sergi Reboredo/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 28239208
(c) Dukas -
DUK10125911_004
REPORTAGE - Costa Rica
Giants crocodiles (Crocodylus acutus) rest on the bank of Rio Tarcoles. Costa Rica. American crocodile (Crocodylus acutus). Central America, Costa Rica, Puntarenas, Carara. (Photo by Sergi Reboredo/Sipa USA) *** Local Caption *** 28239202
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_101716469_REX
Prince Charles and Camilla Duchess of Cornwall Caribbean tour, Cayman Islands - 27 Mar 2019
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Tim Rooke/REX/Shutterstock (10180229i)
Camilla Duchess of Cornwall attends the opening of the Grand Cayman’s newly-expanded Owen Roberts International Airport
Prince Charles and Camilla Duchess of Cornwall Caribbean tour, Cayman Islands - 27 Mar 2019
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_101716462_REX
Prince Charles and Camilla Duchess of Cornwall Caribbean tour, Cayman Islands - 27 Mar 2019
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Tim Rooke/REX/Shutterstock (10180229h)
Prince Charles and Camilla Duchess of Cornwall attend the opening of the Grand Cayman’s newly-expanded Owen Roberts International Airport
Prince Charles and Camilla Duchess of Cornwall Caribbean tour, Cayman Islands - 27 Mar 2019
(c) Dukas -
DUK10121089_029
NEWS - Umweltschutz: Die angeschwemmten Abfallberge an den Küsten Afrikas
Un caiman se dore au soleil.
Cayman in the sun.//VERCELOTMARION_10082/1907161636/Credit:Marion Vercelot/SIPA/1907161637 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00916420
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_123870009_RHA
Cayman, Pantanal, Mato Groso, Brazil, South America
Cayman, Pantanal, Mato Grosso, Brazil, South America
Pablo Cersosimo -
DUKAS_123869986_RHA
Cayman, Pantanal, Mato Groso, Brazil, South America
Cayman, Pantanal, Mato Grosso, Brazil, South America
Pablo Cersosimo -
DUKAS_123870007_RHA
Cayman, Pantanal, Mato Groso, Brazil, South America
Cayman, Pantanal, Mato Grosso, Brazil, South America
Pablo Cersosimo -
DUKAS_123869983_RHA
Cayman, Pantanal, Mato Groso, Brazil, South America
Cayman, Pantanal, Mato Grosso, Brazil, South America
Pablo Cersosimo -
DUKAS_123870020_RHA
Cayman, Pantanal, Mato Groso, Brazil, South America
Cayman, Pantanal, Mato Grosso, Brazil, South America
Pablo Cersosimo -
DUKAS_44062971_REX
Family share their home with 145 pet animals, Weeting, Norfolk, Britain - 10 Oct 2014
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Jason Bye/REX (4198219e)
Jamie Mintram with Speckled Cayman Rudolf
Family share their home with 145 pet animals, Weeting, Norfolk, Britain - 10 Oct 2014
*Full story: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/pj95
Sharing their home with almost 150 pets, the Mintram family redefine the meaning of animal mad! Former lab technician Jamie and his wife Michelle, 32, live with their children Chloe, six, and Josh, eight, in a typical detached house in Weeting, Norfolk. What's not so typical is the fact they also share their home with a veritable menagerie of creatures. This includes a collection of 30 snakes - including a boa constrictor called Big Mamma - a crocodile, a monitor lizard and a host of creepy crawlies that live in the garage. And the other rooms of the house don't escape either with every one, besides the living room, showing traces of the Mintram's animal inhabitants. Indeed, the second reception room, the dining room, the fourth bedroom and much of the kitchen are given over to the non-human members of the family.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_44062774_REX
Family share their home with 145 pet animals, Weeting, Norfolk, Britain - 10 Oct 2014
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Jason Bye/REX (4198219d)
Jamie Mintram with Speckled Cayman Rudolf
Family share their home with 145 pet animals, Weeting, Norfolk, Britain - 10 Oct 2014
*Full story: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/pj95
Sharing their home with almost 150 pets, the Mintram family redefine the meaning of animal mad! Former lab technician Jamie and his wife Michelle, 32, live with their children Chloe, six, and Josh, eight, in a typical detached house in Weeting, Norfolk. What's not so typical is the fact they also share their home with a veritable menagerie of creatures. This includes a collection of 30 snakes - including a boa constrictor called Big Mamma - a crocodile, a monitor lizard and a host of creepy crawlies that live in the garage. And the other rooms of the house don't escape either with every one, besides the living room, showing traces of the Mintram's animal inhabitants. Indeed, the second reception room, the dining room, the fourth bedroom and much of the kitchen are given over to the non-human members of the family.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_20406096_REX
Underwater fluorescent photographs by Alex Mustard - 19 Aug 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Alex Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features (1448620j)
Underwater Electric Light Show
These underwater corals look stunning as they emit a fluorescent glow of green, orange and purple.
The colours radiate from the coral in the same way a UV light bounces off bright clothing in a nightclub.
British photographer Alex Mustard, 36, snapped the glowing corals, worms, anemone and crabs while diving in the Red Sea and the Caribbean.
He took the pictures at night and used a standard camera fitted with a blue flash, which triggers the fluorescent reaction.
The exact reason why the corals fluoresce is a mystery but it is thought the fluorescent pigment acts like a sun screen.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "The Red Sea and the Caribbean both have healthy and rich coral reefs.
"For these types of images you want to photograph where there are lots of species of corals as some glow with fluorescence and some do not.
"What is amazing is that you don't know what you will get until you see the pictures.
"Some corals glow strongly, while others do not.
"It is only when you take the picture and the blue flashes go off that you know if the coral is a performer.
"The pictures are taken with a normal camera and the colours are those that the camera recorded. They are not adjusted on a computer.
"I fitted filters to my flashes so they produce only deep blue light.
"This excites the fluorescence response in the corals, which then give out the greens, oranges and yellows you see in the images.
"The effect is the same as when bright colours in your clothes show up under the UV light in a disco or nightclub."
He added: "Corals are important creatures, which build the reefs that support whole ecosystems.
"They are under threat from rising sea temperatures and increasingly acidic seas.
"But they are not always the most e...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCFWJSCLV
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_20406093_REX
Underwater fluorescent photographs by Alex Mustard - 19 Aug 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Alex Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features (1448620f)
Underwater Electric Light Show
These underwater corals look stunning as they emit a fluorescent glow of green, orange and purple.
The colours radiate from the coral in the same way a UV light bounces off bright clothing in a nightclub.
British photographer Alex Mustard, 36, snapped the glowing corals, worms, anemone and crabs while diving in the Red Sea and the Caribbean.
He took the pictures at night and used a standard camera fitted with a blue flash, which triggers the fluorescent reaction.
The exact reason why the corals fluoresce is a mystery but it is thought the fluorescent pigment acts like a sun screen.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "The Red Sea and the Caribbean both have healthy and rich coral reefs.
"For these types of images you want to photograph where there are lots of species of corals as some glow with fluorescence and some do not.
"What is amazing is that you don't know what you will get until you see the pictures.
"Some corals glow strongly, while others do not.
"It is only when you take the picture and the blue flashes go off that you know if the coral is a performer.
"The pictures are taken with a normal camera and the colours are those that the camera recorded. They are not adjusted on a computer.
"I fitted filters to my flashes so they produce only deep blue light.
"This excites the fluorescence response in the corals, which then give out the greens, oranges and yellows you see in the images.
"The effect is the same as when bright colours in your clothes show up under the UV light in a disco or nightclub."
He added: "Corals are important creatures, which build the reefs that support whole ecosystems.
"They are under threat from rising sea temperatures and increasingly acidic seas.
"But they are not always the most e...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCFWJSCLV
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_20406092_REX
Underwater fluorescent photographs by Alex Mustard - 19 Aug 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Alex Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features (1448620h)
Underwater Electric Light Show
These underwater corals look stunning as they emit a fluorescent glow of green, orange and purple.
The colours radiate from the coral in the same way a UV light bounces off bright clothing in a nightclub.
British photographer Alex Mustard, 36, snapped the glowing corals, worms, anemone and crabs while diving in the Red Sea and the Caribbean.
He took the pictures at night and used a standard camera fitted with a blue flash, which triggers the fluorescent reaction.
The exact reason why the corals fluoresce is a mystery but it is thought the fluorescent pigment acts like a sun screen.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "The Red Sea and the Caribbean both have healthy and rich coral reefs.
"For these types of images you want to photograph where there are lots of species of corals as some glow with fluorescence and some do not.
"What is amazing is that you don't know what you will get until you see the pictures.
"Some corals glow strongly, while others do not.
"It is only when you take the picture and the blue flashes go off that you know if the coral is a performer.
"The pictures are taken with a normal camera and the colours are those that the camera recorded. They are not adjusted on a computer.
"I fitted filters to my flashes so they produce only deep blue light.
"This excites the fluorescence response in the corals, which then give out the greens, oranges and yellows you see in the images.
"The effect is the same as when bright colours in your clothes show up under the UV light in a disco or nightclub."
He added: "Corals are important creatures, which build the reefs that support whole ecosystems.
"They are under threat from rising sea temperatures and increasingly acidic seas.
"But they are not always the most e...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCFWJSCLV
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_20406091_REX
Underwater fluorescent photographs by Alex Mustard - 19 Aug 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Alex Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features (1448620g)
Underwater Electric Light Show
These underwater corals look stunning as they emit a fluorescent glow of green, orange and purple.
The colours radiate from the coral in the same way a UV light bounces off bright clothing in a nightclub.
British photographer Alex Mustard, 36, snapped the glowing corals, worms, anemone and crabs while diving in the Red Sea and the Caribbean.
He took the pictures at night and used a standard camera fitted with a blue flash, which triggers the fluorescent reaction.
The exact reason why the corals fluoresce is a mystery but it is thought the fluorescent pigment acts like a sun screen.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "The Red Sea and the Caribbean both have healthy and rich coral reefs.
"For these types of images you want to photograph where there are lots of species of corals as some glow with fluorescence and some do not.
"What is amazing is that you don't know what you will get until you see the pictures.
"Some corals glow strongly, while others do not.
"It is only when you take the picture and the blue flashes go off that you know if the coral is a performer.
"The pictures are taken with a normal camera and the colours are those that the camera recorded. They are not adjusted on a computer.
"I fitted filters to my flashes so they produce only deep blue light.
"This excites the fluorescence response in the corals, which then give out the greens, oranges and yellows you see in the images.
"The effect is the same as when bright colours in your clothes show up under the UV light in a disco or nightclub."
He added: "Corals are important creatures, which build the reefs that support whole ecosystems.
"They are under threat from rising sea temperatures and increasingly acidic seas.
"But they are not always the most e...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCFWJSCLV
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_20406090_REX
Underwater fluorescent photographs by Alex Mustard - 19 Aug 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Alex Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features (1448620e)
Underwater Electric Light Show
These underwater corals look stunning as they emit a fluorescent glow of green, orange and purple.
The colours radiate from the coral in the same way a UV light bounces off bright clothing in a nightclub.
British photographer Alex Mustard, 36, snapped the glowing corals, worms, anemone and crabs while diving in the Red Sea and the Caribbean.
He took the pictures at night and used a standard camera fitted with a blue flash, which triggers the fluorescent reaction.
The exact reason why the corals fluoresce is a mystery but it is thought the fluorescent pigment acts like a sun screen.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "The Red Sea and the Caribbean both have healthy and rich coral reefs.
"For these types of images you want to photograph where there are lots of species of corals as some glow with fluorescence and some do not.
"What is amazing is that you don't know what you will get until you see the pictures.
"Some corals glow strongly, while others do not.
"It is only when you take the picture and the blue flashes go off that you know if the coral is a performer.
"The pictures are taken with a normal camera and the colours are those that the camera recorded. They are not adjusted on a computer.
"I fitted filters to my flashes so they produce only deep blue light.
"This excites the fluorescence response in the corals, which then give out the greens, oranges and yellows you see in the images.
"The effect is the same as when bright colours in your clothes show up under the UV light in a disco or nightclub."
He added: "Corals are important creatures, which build the reefs that support whole ecosystems.
"They are under threat from rising sea temperatures and increasingly acidic seas.
"But they are not always the most e...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCFWJSCLV
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_20406089_REX
Underwater fluorescent photographs by Alex Mustard - 19 Aug 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Alex Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features (1448620i)
Underwater Electric Light Show
These underwater corals look stunning as they emit a fluorescent glow of green, orange and purple.
The colours radiate from the coral in the same way a UV light bounces off bright clothing in a nightclub.
British photographer Alex Mustard, 36, snapped the glowing corals, worms, anemone and crabs while diving in the Red Sea and the Caribbean.
He took the pictures at night and used a standard camera fitted with a blue flash, which triggers the fluorescent reaction.
The exact reason why the corals fluoresce is a mystery but it is thought the fluorescent pigment acts like a sun screen.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "The Red Sea and the Caribbean both have healthy and rich coral reefs.
"For these types of images you want to photograph where there are lots of species of corals as some glow with fluorescence and some do not.
"What is amazing is that you don't know what you will get until you see the pictures.
"Some corals glow strongly, while others do not.
"It is only when you take the picture and the blue flashes go off that you know if the coral is a performer.
"The pictures are taken with a normal camera and the colours are those that the camera recorded. They are not adjusted on a computer.
"I fitted filters to my flashes so they produce only deep blue light.
"This excites the fluorescence response in the corals, which then give out the greens, oranges and yellows you see in the images.
"The effect is the same as when bright colours in your clothes show up under the UV light in a disco or nightclub."
He added: "Corals are important creatures, which build the reefs that support whole ecosystems.
"They are under threat from rising sea temperatures and increasingly acidic seas.
"But they are not always the most e...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCFWJSCLV
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_20406087_REX
Underwater fluorescent photographs by Alex Mustard - 19 Aug 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Alex Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features (1448620b)
Underwater Electric Light Show
These underwater corals look stunning as they emit a fluorescent glow of green, orange and purple.
The colours radiate from the coral in the same way a UV light bounces off bright clothing in a nightclub.
British photographer Alex Mustard, 36, snapped the glowing corals, worms, anemone and crabs while diving in the Red Sea and the Caribbean.
He took the pictures at night and used a standard camera fitted with a blue flash, which triggers the fluorescent reaction.
The exact reason why the corals fluoresce is a mystery but it is thought the fluorescent pigment acts like a sun screen.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "The Red Sea and the Caribbean both have healthy and rich coral reefs.
"For these types of images you want to photograph where there are lots of species of corals as some glow with fluorescence and some do not.
"What is amazing is that you don't know what you will get until you see the pictures.
"Some corals glow strongly, while others do not.
"It is only when you take the picture and the blue flashes go off that you know if the coral is a performer.
"The pictures are taken with a normal camera and the colours are those that the camera recorded. They are not adjusted on a computer.
"I fitted filters to my flashes so they produce only deep blue light.
"This excites the fluorescence response in the corals, which then give out the greens, oranges and yellows you see in the images.
"The effect is the same as when bright colours in your clothes show up under the UV light in a disco or nightclub."
He added: "Corals are important creatures, which build the reefs that support whole ecosystems.
"They are under threat from rising sea temperatures and increasingly acidic seas.
"But they are not always the most e...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCFWJSCLV
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_20406084_REX
Underwater fluorescent photographs by Alex Mustard - 19 Aug 2011
Manadatory Credit: Photo by Alex Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features (1448620d)
Underwater Electric Light Show
These underwater corals look stunning as they emit a fluorescent glow of green, orange and purple.
The colours radiate from the coral in the same way a UV light bounces off bright clothing in a nightclub.
British photographer Alex Mustard, 36, snapped the glowing corals, worms, anemone and crabs while diving in the Red Sea and the Caribbean.
He took the pictures at night and used a standard camera fitted with a blue flash, which triggers the fluorescent reaction.
The exact reason why the corals fluoresce is a mystery but it is thought the fluorescent pigment acts like a sun screen.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "The Red Sea and the Caribbean both have healthy and rich coral reefs.
"For these types of images you want to photograph where there are lots of species of corals as some glow with fluorescence and some do not.
"What is amazing is that you don't know what you will get until you see the pictures.
"Some corals glow strongly, while others do not.
"It is only when you take the picture and the blue flashes go off that you know if the coral is a performer.
"The pictures are taken with a normal camera and the colours are those that the camera recorded. They are not adjusted on a computer.
"I fitted filters to my flashes so they produce only deep blue light.
"This excites the fluorescence response in the corals, which then give out the greens, oranges and yellows you see in the images.
"The effect is the same as when bright colours in your clothes show up under the UV light in a disco or nightclub."
He added: "Corals are important creatures, which build the reefs that support whole ecosystems.
"They are under threat from rising sea temperatures and increasingly acidic seas.
"But they are not always the most e...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/VCFWJSCLV
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_17457473_REX
Diver Alex Mustard photographs undersea ship wrecks across world - Feb 2011
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Alexander Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features ( 1288392q )
Such Curious Things To Sea
An intrepid British photographer has travelled the world snapping pictures of the bizarre things lying on the sea bed.
Diving enthusiast Alex Mustard, 36, has made many strange discoveries while exploring 40 feet beneath the water's surface.
His pictures, taken while investigating the insides of eerie shipwrecks, include barnacle-covered motorbikes once meant for British troops fighting during World War Two.
Rusty British trucks also lie forgotten in their watery graves along with rifles that have never been used.
And one extraordinary photo even shows the shell of the iconic VW Beetle car, now abandoned in the gloom of the murky water.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "Wrecks attract divers because of the incongruity of seeing something from above the waves beneath them.
"The VW Beetle was purposely sunk for divers and it's particularly bizarre - it's the last thing you would expect to sea underwater.
"I find it fascinating seeing something familiar in an alien place - underwater.
"I couldn't say how many wrecks I've seen but each is interesting in their own way. Each is unique, the features different on every wreck and the atmosphere varies too."
One particularly fascinating wreck for Alex is the HMS Thislegorm - a British cargo ship that was carrying military supplies when it was sunk by a German bomber in the Red Sea in 1941.
Alex said: "This wreck is still packed with trucks, bikes and rifles.
"War wrecks are always the most sombre; I find they are not only museums but also memorials.
"And I always have mixed feeling of excitement and sadness when exploring them. It is an intense experience on so many levels."
Alex has explored wrecks both old and new.
His most recent, the USS Kittiwake, a US military ship built...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QWVUYVXYY
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_17457463_REX
Diver Alex Mustard photographs undersea ship wrecks across world - Feb 2011
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Alexander Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features ( 1288392l )
Such Curious Things To Sea
An intrepid British photographer has travelled the world snapping pictures of the bizarre things lying on the sea bed.
Diving enthusiast Alex Mustard, 36, has made many strange discoveries while exploring 40 feet beneath the water's surface.
His pictures, taken while investigating the insides of eerie shipwrecks, include barnacle-covered motorbikes once meant for British troops fighting during World War Two.
Rusty British trucks also lie forgotten in their watery graves along with rifles that have never been used.
And one extraordinary photo even shows the shell of the iconic VW Beetle car, now abandoned in the gloom of the murky water.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "Wrecks attract divers because of the incongruity of seeing something from above the waves beneath them.
"The VW Beetle was purposely sunk for divers and it's particularly bizarre - it's the last thing you would expect to sea underwater.
"I find it fascinating seeing something familiar in an alien place - underwater.
"I couldn't say how many wrecks I've seen but each is interesting in their own way. Each is unique, the features different on every wreck and the atmosphere varies too."
One particularly fascinating wreck for Alex is the HMS Thislegorm - a British cargo ship that was carrying military supplies when it was sunk by a German bomber in the Red Sea in 1941.
Alex said: "This wreck is still packed with trucks, bikes and rifles.
"War wrecks are always the most sombre; I find they are not only museums but also memorials.
"And I always have mixed feeling of excitement and sadness when exploring them. It is an intense experience on so many levels."
Alex has explored wrecks both old and new.
His most recent, the USS Kittiwake, a US military ship built...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QWVUYVXYY
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_17457462_REX
Diver Alex Mustard photographs undersea ship wrecks across world - Feb 2011
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Alexander Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features ( 1288392m )
Such Curious Things To Sea
An intrepid British photographer has travelled the world snapping pictures of the bizarre things lying on the sea bed.
Diving enthusiast Alex Mustard, 36, has made many strange discoveries while exploring 40 feet beneath the water's surface.
His pictures, taken while investigating the insides of eerie shipwrecks, include barnacle-covered motorbikes once meant for British troops fighting during World War Two.
Rusty British trucks also lie forgotten in their watery graves along with rifles that have never been used.
And one extraordinary photo even shows the shell of the iconic VW Beetle car, now abandoned in the gloom of the murky water.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "Wrecks attract divers because of the incongruity of seeing something from above the waves beneath them.
"The VW Beetle was purposely sunk for divers and it's particularly bizarre - it's the last thing you would expect to sea underwater.
"I find it fascinating seeing something familiar in an alien place - underwater.
"I couldn't say how many wrecks I've seen but each is interesting in their own way. Each is unique, the features different on every wreck and the atmosphere varies too."
One particularly fascinating wreck for Alex is the HMS Thislegorm - a British cargo ship that was carrying military supplies when it was sunk by a German bomber in the Red Sea in 1941.
Alex said: "This wreck is still packed with trucks, bikes and rifles.
"War wrecks are always the most sombre; I find they are not only museums but also memorials.
"And I always have mixed feeling of excitement and sadness when exploring them. It is an intense experience on so many levels."
Alex has explored wrecks both old and new.
His most recent, the USS Kittiwake, a US military ship built...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QWVUYVXYY
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_17457461_REX
Diver Alex Mustard photographs undersea ship wrecks across world - Feb 2011
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Alexander Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features ( 1288392n )
Such Curious Things To Sea
An intrepid British photographer has travelled the world snapping pictures of the bizarre things lying on the sea bed.
Diving enthusiast Alex Mustard, 36, has made many strange discoveries while exploring 40 feet beneath the water's surface.
His pictures, taken while investigating the insides of eerie shipwrecks, include barnacle-covered motorbikes once meant for British troops fighting during World War Two.
Rusty British trucks also lie forgotten in their watery graves along with rifles that have never been used.
And one extraordinary photo even shows the shell of the iconic VW Beetle car, now abandoned in the gloom of the murky water.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "Wrecks attract divers because of the incongruity of seeing something from above the waves beneath them.
"The VW Beetle was purposely sunk for divers and it's particularly bizarre - it's the last thing you would expect to sea underwater.
"I find it fascinating seeing something familiar in an alien place - underwater.
"I couldn't say how many wrecks I've seen but each is interesting in their own way. Each is unique, the features different on every wreck and the atmosphere varies too."
One particularly fascinating wreck for Alex is the HMS Thislegorm - a British cargo ship that was carrying military supplies when it was sunk by a German bomber in the Red Sea in 1941.
Alex said: "This wreck is still packed with trucks, bikes and rifles.
"War wrecks are always the most sombre; I find they are not only museums but also memorials.
"And I always have mixed feeling of excitement and sadness when exploring them. It is an intense experience on so many levels."
Alex has explored wrecks both old and new.
His most recent, the USS Kittiwake, a US military ship built...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QWVUYVXYY
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_17457446_REX
Diver Alex Mustard photographs undersea ship wrecks across world - Feb 2011
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Alexander Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features ( 1288392i )
Such Curious Things To Sea
An intrepid British photographer has travelled the world snapping pictures of the bizarre things lying on the sea bed.
Diving enthusiast Alex Mustard, 36, has made many strange discoveries while exploring 40 feet beneath the water's surface.
His pictures, taken while investigating the insides of eerie shipwrecks, include barnacle-covered motorbikes once meant for British troops fighting during World War Two.
Rusty British trucks also lie forgotten in their watery graves along with rifles that have never been used.
And one extraordinary photo even shows the shell of the iconic VW Beetle car, now abandoned in the gloom of the murky water.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "Wrecks attract divers because of the incongruity of seeing something from above the waves beneath them.
"The VW Beetle was purposely sunk for divers and it's particularly bizarre - it's the last thing you would expect to sea underwater.
"I find it fascinating seeing something familiar in an alien place - underwater.
"I couldn't say how many wrecks I've seen but each is interesting in their own way. Each is unique, the features different on every wreck and the atmosphere varies too."
One particularly fascinating wreck for Alex is the HMS Thislegorm - a British cargo ship that was carrying military supplies when it was sunk by a German bomber in the Red Sea in 1941.
Alex said: "This wreck is still packed with trucks, bikes and rifles.
"War wrecks are always the most sombre; I find they are not only museums but also memorials.
"And I always have mixed feeling of excitement and sadness when exploring them. It is an intense experience on so many levels."
Alex has explored wrecks both old and new.
His most recent, the USS Kittiwake, a US military ship built...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QWVUYVXYY
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_17457444_REX
Diver Alex Mustard photographs undersea ship wrecks across world - Feb 2011
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Alexander Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features ( 1288392k )
Such Curious Things To Sea
An intrepid British photographer has travelled the world snapping pictures of the bizarre things lying on the sea bed.
Diving enthusiast Alex Mustard, 36, has made many strange discoveries while exploring 40 feet beneath the water's surface.
His pictures, taken while investigating the insides of eerie shipwrecks, include barnacle-covered motorbikes once meant for British troops fighting during World War Two.
Rusty British trucks also lie forgotten in their watery graves along with rifles that have never been used.
And one extraordinary photo even shows the shell of the iconic VW Beetle car, now abandoned in the gloom of the murky water.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "Wrecks attract divers because of the incongruity of seeing something from above the waves beneath them.
"The VW Beetle was purposely sunk for divers and it's particularly bizarre - it's the last thing you would expect to sea underwater.
"I find it fascinating seeing something familiar in an alien place - underwater.
"I couldn't say how many wrecks I've seen but each is interesting in their own way. Each is unique, the features different on every wreck and the atmosphere varies too."
One particularly fascinating wreck for Alex is the HMS Thislegorm - a British cargo ship that was carrying military supplies when it was sunk by a German bomber in the Red Sea in 1941.
Alex said: "This wreck is still packed with trucks, bikes and rifles.
"War wrecks are always the most sombre; I find they are not only museums but also memorials.
"And I always have mixed feeling of excitement and sadness when exploring them. It is an intense experience on so many levels."
Alex has explored wrecks both old and new.
His most recent, the USS Kittiwake, a US military ship built...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QWVUYVXYY
DUKAS/REX -
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Diver Alex Mustard photographs undersea ship wrecks across world - Feb 2011
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Alexander Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features ( 1288392e )
Such Curious Things To Sea
An intrepid British photographer has travelled the world snapping pictures of the bizarre things lying on the sea bed.
Diving enthusiast Alex Mustard, 36, has made many strange discoveries while exploring 40 feet beneath the water's surface.
His pictures, taken while investigating the insides of eerie shipwrecks, include barnacle-covered motorbikes once meant for British troops fighting during World War Two.
Rusty British trucks also lie forgotten in their watery graves along with rifles that have never been used.
And one extraordinary photo even shows the shell of the iconic VW Beetle car, now abandoned in the gloom of the murky water.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "Wrecks attract divers because of the incongruity of seeing something from above the waves beneath them.
"The VW Beetle was purposely sunk for divers and it's particularly bizarre - it's the last thing you would expect to sea underwater.
"I find it fascinating seeing something familiar in an alien place - underwater.
"I couldn't say how many wrecks I've seen but each is interesting in their own way. Each is unique, the features different on every wreck and the atmosphere varies too."
One particularly fascinating wreck for Alex is the HMS Thislegorm - a British cargo ship that was carrying military supplies when it was sunk by a German bomber in the Red Sea in 1941.
Alex said: "This wreck is still packed with trucks, bikes and rifles.
"War wrecks are always the most sombre; I find they are not only museums but also memorials.
"And I always have mixed feeling of excitement and sadness when exploring them. It is an intense experience on so many levels."
Alex has explored wrecks both old and new.
His most recent, the USS Kittiwake, a US military ship built...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QWVUYVXYY
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_17457432_REX
Diver Alex Mustard photographs undersea ship wrecks across world - Feb 2011
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Alexander Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features ( 1288392h )
Such Curious Things To Sea
An intrepid British photographer has travelled the world snapping pictures of the bizarre things lying on the sea bed.
Diving enthusiast Alex Mustard, 36, has made many strange discoveries while exploring 40 feet beneath the water's surface.
His pictures, taken while investigating the insides of eerie shipwrecks, include barnacle-covered motorbikes once meant for British troops fighting during World War Two.
Rusty British trucks also lie forgotten in their watery graves along with rifles that have never been used.
And one extraordinary photo even shows the shell of the iconic VW Beetle car, now abandoned in the gloom of the murky water.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "Wrecks attract divers because of the incongruity of seeing something from above the waves beneath them.
"The VW Beetle was purposely sunk for divers and it's particularly bizarre - it's the last thing you would expect to sea underwater.
"I find it fascinating seeing something familiar in an alien place - underwater.
"I couldn't say how many wrecks I've seen but each is interesting in their own way. Each is unique, the features different on every wreck and the atmosphere varies too."
One particularly fascinating wreck for Alex is the HMS Thislegorm - a British cargo ship that was carrying military supplies when it was sunk by a German bomber in the Red Sea in 1941.
Alex said: "This wreck is still packed with trucks, bikes and rifles.
"War wrecks are always the most sombre; I find they are not only museums but also memorials.
"And I always have mixed feeling of excitement and sadness when exploring them. It is an intense experience on so many levels."
Alex has explored wrecks both old and new.
His most recent, the USS Kittiwake, a US military ship built...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QWVUYVXYY
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_17457423_REX
Diver Alex Mustard photographs undersea ship wrecks across world - Feb 2011
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Alexander Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features ( 1288392a )
Such Curious Things To Sea
An intrepid British photographer has travelled the world snapping pictures of the bizarre things lying on the sea bed.
Diving enthusiast Alex Mustard, 36, has made many strange discoveries while exploring 40 feet beneath the water's surface.
His pictures, taken while investigating the insides of eerie shipwrecks, include barnacle-covered motorbikes once meant for British troops fighting during World War Two.
Rusty British trucks also lie forgotten in their watery graves along with rifles that have never been used.
And one extraordinary photo even shows the shell of the iconic VW Beetle car, now abandoned in the gloom of the murky water.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "Wrecks attract divers because of the incongruity of seeing something from above the waves beneath them.
"The VW Beetle was purposely sunk for divers and it's particularly bizarre - it's the last thing you would expect to sea underwater.
"I find it fascinating seeing something familiar in an alien place - underwater.
"I couldn't say how many wrecks I've seen but each is interesting in their own way. Each is unique, the features different on every wreck and the atmosphere varies too."
One particularly fascinating wreck for Alex is the HMS Thislegorm - a British cargo ship that was carrying military supplies when it was sunk by a German bomber in the Red Sea in 1941.
Alex said: "This wreck is still packed with trucks, bikes and rifles.
"War wrecks are always the most sombre; I find they are not only museums but also memorials.
"And I always have mixed feeling of excitement and sadness when exploring them. It is an intense experience on so many levels."
Alex has explored wrecks both old and new.
His most recent, the USS Kittiwake, a US military ship built...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QWVUYVXYY
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_17457413_REX
Diver Alex Mustard photographs undersea ship wrecks across world - Feb 2011
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Alexander Mustard/Solent News / Rex Features ( 1288392b )
Such Curious Things To Sea
An intrepid British photographer has travelled the world snapping pictures of the bizarre things lying on the sea bed.
Diving enthusiast Alex Mustard, 36, has made many strange discoveries while exploring 40 feet beneath the water's surface.
His pictures, taken while investigating the insides of eerie shipwrecks, include barnacle-covered motorbikes once meant for British troops fighting during World War Two.
Rusty British trucks also lie forgotten in their watery graves along with rifles that have never been used.
And one extraordinary photo even shows the shell of the iconic VW Beetle car, now abandoned in the gloom of the murky water.
Alex, from Southampton, Hants, said: "Wrecks attract divers because of the incongruity of seeing something from above the waves beneath them.
"The VW Beetle was purposely sunk for divers and it's particularly bizarre - it's the last thing you would expect to sea underwater.
"I find it fascinating seeing something familiar in an alien place - underwater.
"I couldn't say how many wrecks I've seen but each is interesting in their own way. Each is unique, the features different on every wreck and the atmosphere varies too."
One particularly fascinating wreck for Alex is the HMS Thislegorm - a British cargo ship that was carrying military supplies when it was sunk by a German bomber in the Red Sea in 1941.
Alex said: "This wreck is still packed with trucks, bikes and rifles.
"War wrecks are always the most sombre; I find they are not only museums but also memorials.
"And I always have mixed feeling of excitement and sadness when exploring them. It is an intense experience on so many levels."
Alex has explored wrecks both old and new.
His most recent, the USS Kittiwake, a US military ship built...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/QWVUYVXYY
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_13983089_REX
Brave butterfly perches on snout of hungry cayman, Pantanal wetlands, Brazil - Apr 2010
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Stefan Huwiler/Solent News / Rex Features ( 1175999b )
The brave butterfly perches on the hungry cayman's head
Brave butterfly perches on snout of hungry cayman, Pantanal wetlands, Brazil - Apr 2010
FLUTTER LIKE A BUTTERLY (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Brave butterfly perches on snout of hungry cayman, Pantanal wetlands, Brazil - Apr 2010
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Stefan Huwiler/Solent News / Rex Features ( 1175999a )
The brave butterfly perches on the hungry cayman's snout
Brave butterfly perches on snout of hungry cayman, Pantanal wetlands, Brazil - Apr 2010
FLUTTER LIKE A BUTTERLY (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2009, London, Britain - 18 May 2009
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Nils Jorgensen / Rex Features ( 927123ad )
Cayman Islands underwater reef garden stand.
RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2009, London, Britain - 18 May 2009
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2009, London, Britain - 18 May 2009
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Nils Jorgensen / Rex Features ( 927123ac )
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Cayman Islands underwater reef garden stand.
RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2009, London, Britain - 18 May 2009
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Marine Wildlife
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Lawson Wood / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 746904A )
ATLANTIS scupture park, Cayman Brac, Cayman Islands, Caribbean
Marine Wildlife
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Marine Wildlife
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Lawson Wood / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 746903A )
ATLANTIS scupture park, Cayman Brac, Cayman Islands, Caribbean
Marine Wildlife
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Marine Wildlife
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Lawson Wood / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 746875A )
ATLANTIS scupture park, Cayman Brac, Cayman Islands, Caribbean
Marine Wildlife
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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