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DUK10008887_024
FEATURE - 'Aliens' unter Wasser
MANDATORY CREDIT: Kei Nomiyama/REX Shutterstock. Only for use in story about Kei's Blackwater photo series. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kei Nomiyama/REX Shutterstock (5440422d)
Phronima sedentaria attacks salp, takes out bodily contents, and lives in it. This small crustacea lays an egg into this "barrel", as seen here. Kei Nomiyama says these remind him of the sci-fi film 'Aliens'
Blackwater: The marine life photography of Kei Nomiyama, Japan - Nov 2015
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/rmbq
They look like creatures from another planet, but these weird specimens are all marine life captured by talented underwater photographer Kei Nomiyama.
In his photo series Blackwater, the 36-year-old presents the amazing creatures discovered in the sea at night.
His work includes the quirky sight of a 'jellyfish rider', a lobster larvae hitching a ride on a hapless jellyfish, and the Phronima Sedentaria, a species of amphipod crustacean, that Kei says reminds him of the sci-fi film 'Aliens'.
Kei explains: "I live in Matsuyama city at Shikoku island, smallest of the four main islands in Japan. I mainly take these photos at Omi-island in Yamaguchi-prefecture. The Omi-island is located in the south of the main island of Japan and facing the Sea of Japan.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10008887_023
FEATURE - 'Aliens' unter Wasser
MANDATORY CREDIT: Kei Nomiyama/REX Shutterstock. Only for use in story about Kei's Blackwater photo series. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kei Nomiyama/REX Shutterstock (5440422b)
Phronima sedentaria attacks salp, takes out bodily contents, and lives in it. This small crustacea lays an egg into this "barrel". Kei Nomiyama says these remind him of the sci-fi film 'Aliens'
Blackwater: The marine life photography of Kei Nomiyama, Japan - Nov 2015
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/rmbq
They look like creatures from another planet, but these weird specimens are all marine life captured by talented underwater photographer Kei Nomiyama.
In his photo series Blackwater, the 36-year-old presents the amazing creatures discovered in the sea at night.
His work includes the quirky sight of a 'jellyfish rider', a lobster larvae hitching a ride on a hapless jellyfish, and the Phronima Sedentaria, a species of amphipod crustacean, that Kei says reminds him of the sci-fi film 'Aliens'.
Kei explains: "I live in Matsuyama city at Shikoku island, smallest of the four main islands in Japan. I mainly take these photos at Omi-island in Yamaguchi-prefecture. The Omi-island is located in the south of the main island of Japan and facing the Sea of Japan.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10008887_004
FEATURE - 'Aliens' unter Wasser
MANDATORY CREDIT: Kei Nomiyama/REX Shutterstock. Only for use in story about Kei's Blackwater photo series. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kei Nomiyama/REX Shutterstock (5440422z)
Phronima sedentaria. Kei Nomiyama says these remind him of the sci-fi film 'Aliens'
Blackwater: The marine life photography of Kei Nomiyama, Japan - Nov 2015
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/rmbq
They look like creatures from another planet, but these weird specimens are all marine life captured by talented underwater photographer Kei Nomiyama.
In his photo series Blackwater, the 36-year-old presents the amazing creatures discovered in the sea at night.
His work includes the quirky sight of a 'jellyfish rider', a lobster larvae hitching a ride on a hapless jellyfish, and the Phronima Sedentaria, a species of amphipod crustacean, that Kei says reminds him of the sci-fi film 'Aliens'.
Kei explains: "I live in Matsuyama city at Shikoku island, smallest of the four main islands in Japan. I mainly take these photos at Omi-island in Yamaguchi-prefecture. The Omi-island is located in the south of the main island of Japan and facing the Sea of Japan.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10008887_003
FEATURE - 'Aliens' unter Wasser
MANDATORY CREDIT: Kei Nomiyama/REX Shutterstock. Only for use in story about Kei's Blackwater photo series. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Kei Nomiyama/REX Shutterstock (5440422c)
Phronima sedentaria attacks salp, takes out bodily contents, and lives in it. This small crustacea lays an egg into this "barrel", as seen here. Kei Nomiyama says these remind him of the sci-fi film 'Aliens'
Blackwater: The marine life photography of Kei Nomiyama, Japan - Nov 2015
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/rmbq
They look like creatures from another planet, but these weird specimens are all marine life captured by talented underwater photographer Kei Nomiyama.
In his photo series Blackwater, the 36-year-old presents the amazing creatures discovered in the sea at night.
His work includes the quirky sight of a 'jellyfish rider', a lobster larvae hitching a ride on a hapless jellyfish, and the Phronima Sedentaria, a species of amphipod crustacean, that Kei says reminds him of the sci-fi film 'Aliens'.
Kei explains: "I live in Matsuyama city at Shikoku island, smallest of the four main islands in Japan. I mainly take these photos at Omi-island in Yamaguchi-prefecture. The Omi-island is located in the south of the main island of Japan and facing the Sea of Japan.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_14935588_REX
Deep sea creatures found by University of Queensland scientists near the Great Barrier Reef, Australia - 14 Jul 2010
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 1207849c )
Scientists Shed Light On Strange Creatures Of The Deep
Looming out of the darkness thousands of feet below the surface of the sea, meet the incredible deep-sea fish discovered under the Great Barrier Reef.
These amazing pictures of previously undocumented marine life were taken by scientists from the University of Queensland's Brain Institute.
The weird and wonderful creatures were documented using remote-controlled equipment 1,400 metres down on the sea floor at the site of Osprey Reef, 220 miles North-East of Cairns in Australia.
Professor Justin Marshall, the marine biologist who led the mission, said: "As well as understanding life at the surface we need to plunge off the walls of Osprey to describe the deep-sea life that lives down to 2000m, beyond the reach of sunlight.
"We simply do not know what life is down there and our cameras can now record the behaviour and life in Australia's largest biosphere, the deep-sea."
Creatures discovered by the team include a small shrimp-like crustacean called an amphipod, "prehistoric" six gilled sharks, oil fish and some unknown species which are still being studied.
The deep-sea oddities were photographed using special low-light sensitive, custom designed remote controlled cameras, which sat on the sea floor over the course of 10 days.
Researchers from institute believe that studying marine life could help with research about humans.
For example, says Professor Marshall, understanding how nerve cells function was first pioneered through work on squid.
He added: "We are now returning to these original model systems, both for their own intrinsic interest and also to better understand brain disorders which lead to conditions such as epilepsy".
As such, the scientists believe that learning more about these creatures' primitive eyes and brain could help neuroscien...
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/EPQRCJIFI
DUKAS/REX