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  • FEATURE - Fisch im Fisch
    DUK10053232_007
    FEATURE - Fisch im Fisch
    Pictured: Saddleback clownfish with parasite attached to tongue.

    This may look like a picture of just one fish but if you look a little closer there is a second creature hiding.

    Photographer Ed Brown photographed the saddleback clownfish, while he was diving, as it swam underwater with an unwanted guest in its mouth.

    The tiny isopod parasite, which can be spotted just by its two small black eyes, entered the fish through its gills before cutting the blood vessels in its tongue, causing it to fall out, and replacing it with its own body.

    Ed, of Hailsham, East Sussex, said the "repulsive" little parasite looked like "something out of a horror film" after taking the pictures while diving in the Lembeh Strait in North Sulawesi, Indonesia. SEE OUR COPY FOR DETAILS.

    Please byline: Ed Brown/Solent News

    © Ed Brown/Solent News & Photo Agency
    UK +44 (0) 2380 458800 (FOTO: DUKAS/SOLENT NEWS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Fisch im Fisch
    DUK10053232_006
    FEATURE - Fisch im Fisch
    Pictured: Saddleback clownfish with parasite attached to tongue.

    This may look like a picture of just one fish but if you look a little closer there is a second creature hiding.

    Photographer Ed Brown photographed the saddleback clownfish, while he was diving, as it swam underwater with an unwanted guest in its mouth.

    The tiny isopod parasite, which can be spotted just by its two small black eyes, entered the fish through its gills before cutting the blood vessels in its tongue, causing it to fall out, and replacing it with its own body.

    Ed, of Hailsham, East Sussex, said the "repulsive" little parasite looked like "something out of a horror film" after taking the pictures while diving in the Lembeh Strait in North Sulawesi, Indonesia. SEE OUR COPY FOR DETAILS.

    Please byline: Ed Brown/Solent News

    © Ed Brown/Solent News & Photo Agency
    UK +44 (0) 2380 458800 (FOTO: DUKAS/SOLENT NEWS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Fisch im Fisch
    DUK10053232_005
    FEATURE - Fisch im Fisch
    Pictured: Saddleback clownfish with parasite attached to tongue.

    This may look like a picture of just one fish but if you look a little closer there is a second creature hiding.

    Photographer Ed Brown photographed the saddleback clownfish, while he was diving, as it swam underwater with an unwanted guest in its mouth.

    The tiny isopod parasite, which can be spotted just by its two small black eyes, entered the fish through its gills before cutting the blood vessels in its tongue, causing it to fall out, and replacing it with its own body.

    Ed, of Hailsham, East Sussex, said the "repulsive" little parasite looked like "something out of a horror film" after taking the pictures while diving in the Lembeh Strait in North Sulawesi, Indonesia. SEE OUR COPY FOR DETAILS.

    Please byline: Ed Brown/Solent News

    © Ed Brown/Solent News & Photo Agency
    UK +44 (0) 2380 458800 (FOTO: DUKAS/SOLENT NEWS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Fisch im Fisch
    DUK10053232_004
    FEATURE - Fisch im Fisch
    Pictured: Saddleback clownfish with parasite attached to tongue.

    This may look like a picture of just one fish but if you look a little closer there is a second creature hiding.

    Photographer Ed Brown photographed the saddleback clownfish, while he was diving, as it swam underwater with an unwanted guest in its mouth.

    The tiny isopod parasite, which can be spotted just by its two small black eyes, entered the fish through its gills before cutting the blood vessels in its tongue, causing it to fall out, and replacing it with its own body.

    Ed, of Hailsham, East Sussex, said the "repulsive" little parasite looked like "something out of a horror film" after taking the pictures while diving in the Lembeh Strait in North Sulawesi, Indonesia. SEE OUR COPY FOR DETAILS.

    Please byline: Ed Brown/Solent News

    © Ed Brown/Solent News & Photo Agency
    UK +44 (0) 2380 458800 (FOTO: DUKAS/SOLENT NEWS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Fisch im Fisch
    DUK10053232_003
    FEATURE - Fisch im Fisch
    Pictured: Saddleback clownfish with parasite attached to tongue.

    This may look like a picture of just one fish but if you look a little closer there is a second creature hiding.

    Photographer Ed Brown photographed the saddleback clownfish, while he was diving, as it swam underwater with an unwanted guest in its mouth.

    The tiny isopod parasite, which can be spotted just by its two small black eyes, entered the fish through its gills before cutting the blood vessels in its tongue, causing it to fall out, and replacing it with its own body.

    Ed, of Hailsham, East Sussex, said the "repulsive" little parasite looked like "something out of a horror film" after taking the pictures while diving in the Lembeh Strait in North Sulawesi, Indonesia. SEE OUR COPY FOR DETAILS.

    Please byline: Ed Brown/Solent News

    © Ed Brown/Solent News & Photo Agency
    UK +44 (0) 2380 458800 (FOTO: DUKAS/SOLENT NEWS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Fisch im Fisch
    DUK10053232_002
    FEATURE - Fisch im Fisch
    Pictured: Saddleback clownfish with parasite attached to tongue.

    This may look like a picture of just one fish but if you look a little closer there is a second creature hiding.

    Photographer Ed Brown photographed the saddleback clownfish, while he was diving, as it swam underwater with an unwanted guest in its mouth.

    The tiny isopod parasite, which can be spotted just by its two small black eyes, entered the fish through its gills before cutting the blood vessels in its tongue, causing it to fall out, and replacing it with its own body.

    Ed, of Hailsham, East Sussex, said the "repulsive" little parasite looked like "something out of a horror film" after taking the pictures while diving in the Lembeh Strait in North Sulawesi, Indonesia. SEE OUR COPY FOR DETAILS.

    Please byline: Ed Brown/Solent News

    © Ed Brown/Solent News & Photo Agency
    UK +44 (0) 2380 458800 (FOTO: DUKAS/SOLENT NEWS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Fisch im Fisch
    DUK10053232_001
    FEATURE - Fisch im Fisch
    Pictured: Saddleback clownfish with parasite attached to tongue.

    This may look like a picture of just one fish but if you look a little closer there is a second creature hiding.

    Photographer Ed Brown photographed the saddleback clownfish, while he was diving, as it swam underwater with an unwanted guest in its mouth.

    The tiny isopod parasite, which can be spotted just by its two small black eyes, entered the fish through its gills before cutting the blood vessels in its tongue, causing it to fall out, and replacing it with its own body.

    Ed, of Hailsham, East Sussex, said the "repulsive" little parasite looked like "something out of a horror film" after taking the pictures while diving in the Lembeh Strait in North Sulawesi, Indonesia. SEE OUR COPY FOR DETAILS.

    Please byline: Ed Brown/Solent News

    © Ed Brown/Solent News & Photo Agency
    UK +44 (0) 2380 458800 (FOTO: DUKAS/SOLENT NEWS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE: Beeindruckende Unterwasser-Welt in Palau
    DUK10006425_008
    FEATURE: Beeindruckende Unterwasser-Welt in Palau
    Pink Anemonefish, Amphiprion perideraion, Turtle Cove, Micronesia, Palau
    The Pacific island nation of Palau has become home to the sixth largest marine sanctuary in the world.

    The Micronesian reserve, now the largest in the Pacific, will permit no fishing or mining. Palau also established the world's first shark sanctuary in 2009.

    The tiny island nation has set aside 500,000 square kilometres -- 80 percent -- of its maritime territory, for full protection. That's the highest percentage of an exclusive economic zone devoted to marine conservation by any country in the world. (FOTO: DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE: Beeindruckende Unterwasser-Welt in Palau
    DUK10006425_001
    FEATURE: Beeindruckende Unterwasser-Welt in Palau
    PINK ANEMONEFISH on anemone Amphiprion perideraion Palau, South Pacific
    The Pacific island nation of Palau has become home to the sixth largest marine sanctuary in the world.

    The Micronesian reserve, now the largest in the Pacific, will permit no fishing or mining. Palau also established the world's first shark sanctuary in 2009.

    The tiny island nation has set aside 500,000 square kilometres -- 80 percent -- of its maritime territory, for full protection. That's the highest percentage of an exclusive economic zone devoted to marine conservation by any country in the world. (FOTO: DUKAS/PHOTOSHOT)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • MARINE WILDLIFE
    DUKAS_08628062_REX
    MARINE WILDLIFE
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Len Deeley / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 842313a )
    Clownfish (Amphiprion bicinctus), Egyptian Red Sea, in sea anemone tentacles, 03-12-06
    MARINE WILDLIFE

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX