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DUKAS_189050686_NUR
Underwater Shots In Tropea, Italy
(EDITOR’S NOTE: photo was taken with diving equipment in the Tropea seabed) A Serranus Scriba is seen in seabed of Tropea, Calabria, Italy, on September 9th, 2025. (Photo by Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189050615_NUR
Underwater Shots In Tropea, Italy
(EDITOR’S NOTE: photo was taken with diving equipment in the Tropea seabed) A group of striped mullets is seen in seabed of Tropea, Calabria, Italy, on September 9th, 2025. (Photo by Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189050579_NUR
Underwater Shots In Tropea, Italy
(EDITOR’S NOTE: photo was taken with diving equipment in the Tropea seabed) Fishes are seen in seabed of Tropea, Calabria, Italy, on September 9th, 2025. (Photo by Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189050575_NUR
Underwater Shots In Tropea, Italy
(EDITOR’S NOTE: photo was taken with diving equipment in the Tropea seabed) A Bothus podas, also known as the wide-eyed flounder, is seen in seabed of Tropea, Calabria, Italy, on September 9th, 2025. (Photo by Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189050564_NUR
Underwater Shots In Tropea, Italy
(EDITOR’S NOTE: photo was taken with diving equipment in the Tropea seabed) An hermit crab is seen in seabed of Tropea, Calabria, Italy, on September 9th, 2025. (Photo by Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189050557_NUR
Underwater Shots In Tropea, Italy
(EDITOR’S NOTE: photo was taken with diving equipment in the Tropea seabed) Sea urchins are seen in seabed of Tropea, Calabria, Italy, on September 9th, 2025. (Photo by Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189050535_NUR
Underwater Shots In Tropea, Italy
(EDITOR’S NOTE: photo was taken with diving equipment in the Tropea seabed) A group of Saddled seabream (Oblada melanurus Linnaeus) are seen in seabed of Tropea, Calabria, Italy, on September 9th, 2025. (Photo by Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189050533_NUR
Underwater Shots In Tropea, Italy
(EDITOR’S NOTE: photo was taken with diving equipment in the Tropea seabed) A group of Saddled seabream (Oblada melanurus Linnaeus) are seen in seabed of Tropea, Calabria, Italy, on September 9th, 2025. (Photo by Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189050529_NUR
Underwater Shots In Tropea, Italy
(EDITOR’S NOTE: photo was taken with diving equipment in the Tropea seabed) A group of Saddled seabream (Oblada melanurus Linnaeus) are seen in seabed of Tropea, Calabria, Italy, on September 9th, 2025. (Photo by Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189050521_NUR
Underwater Shots In Tropea, Italy
(EDITOR’S NOTE: photo was taken with diving equipment in the Tropea seabed) A group of Saddled seabream (Oblada melanurus Linnaeus) are seen in seabed of Tropea, Calabria, Italy, on September 9th, 2025. (Photo by Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189050516_NUR
Underwater Shots In Tropea, Italy
(EDITOR’S NOTE: photo was taken with diving equipment in the Tropea seabed) A group of Saddled seabream (Oblada melanurus Linnaeus) are seen in seabed of Tropea, Calabria, Italy, on September 9th, 2025. (Photo by Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189050477_NUR
Underwater Shots In Tropea, Italy
(EDITOR’S NOTE: photo was taken with diving equipment in the Tropea seabed) A group of Salema porgy fishes (Sarpa salpa) is seen in seabed of Tropea, Calabria, Italy, on September 9th, 2025. (Photo by Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189050475_NUR
Underwater Shots In Tropea, Italy
(EDITOR’S NOTE: photo was taken with diving equipment in the Tropea seabed) A group of Salema porgy fishes (Sarpa salpa) is seen in seabed of Tropea, Calabria, Italy, on September 9th, 2025. (Photo by Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189050472_NUR
Underwater Shots In Tropea, Italy
(EDITOR’S NOTE: photo was taken with diving equipment in the Tropea seabed) A group of Salema porgy fishes (Sarpa salpa) is seen in seabed of Tropea, Calabria, Italy, on September 9th, 2025. (Photo by Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_174743487_EYE
Half a million oysters to be introduced to Humber estuary in restoration plan
European flat oyster is defined as ‘collapsed’ in UK but there are hopes it could return to coastal waters.
Half a million native European flat oysters will be introduced to the estuary after being carefully nurtured by Wilder Humber, a partnership between Yorkshire Wildlife Trust, Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust and the green energy company Ørsted.
Yorkshire Wildlife Oyster Restoration project, based on the Spurn Point, Humberside.
The project aims to restore the number of native oysters on the seabed of the North sea and Humber estuary.
Oyster Larvae are bred and hatched in a bio controlled location by the The Oyster Restoration Co in remote Scotland. The first batch of 400,000 oysters were transported to Yorkahire Wildlife site on the 4th September 2024 and placed to grow in controlled tanks.
Spurn Point.
Gary Calton / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Gary Calton mob 0797312255 -
DUKAS_174743488_EYE
Half a million oysters to be introduced to Humber estuary in restoration plan
European flat oyster is defined as ‘collapsed’ in UK but there are hopes it could return to coastal waters.
Half a million native European flat oysters will be introduced to the estuary after being carefully nurtured by Wilder Humber, a partnership between Yorkshire Wildlife Trust, Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust and the green energy company Ørsted.
Yorkshire Wildlife Oyster Restoration project, based on the Spurn Point, Humberside.
The project aims to restore the number of native oysters on the seabed of the North sea and Humber estuary.
Oyster Larvae are bred and hatched in a bio controlled location by the The Oyster Restoration Co in remote Scotland. The first batch of 400,000 oysters were transported to Yorkahire Wildlife site on the 4th September 2024 and placed to grow in controlled tanks.
Laura Welton holds the delivery of 400,000 young oyster larvae from The Oyster Restoration Project.
Gary Calton / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Gary Calton mob 0797312255 -
DUKAS_174743486_EYE
Half a million oysters to be introduced to Humber estuary in restoration plan
European flat oyster is defined as ‘collapsed’ in UK but there are hopes it could return to coastal waters.
Half a million native European flat oysters will be introduced to the estuary after being carefully nurtured by Wilder Humber, a partnership between Yorkshire Wildlife Trust, Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust and the green energy company Ørsted.
Yorkshire Wildlife Oyster Restoration project, based on the Spurn Point, Humberside.
The project aims to restore the number of native oysters on the seabed of the North sea and Humber estuary.
Oyster Larvae are bred and hatched in a bio controlled location by the The Oyster Restoration Co in remote Scotland. The first batch of 400,000 oysters were transported to Yorkahire Wildlife site on the 4th September 2024 and placed to grow in controlled tanks.
A cluster of young oysters in a tank ready for micro filming by Film maker Finn Varna.
Gary Calton / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Gary Calton mob 0797312255 -
DUKAS_174743485_EYE
Half a million oysters to be introduced to Humber estuary in restoration plan
European flat oyster is defined as ‘collapsed’ in UK but there are hopes it could return to coastal waters.
Half a million native European flat oysters will be introduced to the estuary after being carefully nurtured by Wilder Humber, a partnership between Yorkshire Wildlife Trust, Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust and the green energy company Ørsted.
Yorkshire Wildlife Oyster Restoration project, based on the Spurn Point, Humberside.
The project aims to restore the number of native oysters on the seabed of the North sea and Humber estuary.
Oyster Larvae are bred and hatched in a bio controlled location by the The Oyster Restoration Co in remote Scotland. The first batch of 400,000 oysters were transported to Yorkahire Wildlife site on the 4th September 2024 and placed to grow in controlled tanks.
Dr Boze Hancock, from The Nature Conservancy organisation and lead scientist in the Global project to restore the oyster numbers.
Gary Calton / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Gary Calton mob 0797312255 -
DUKAS_127773453_EYE
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight. In a bid to stop illegal trawling, an Italian fisherman persuaded sculptors to create huge marble artworks – then dropped them in the Mediterranean. Paolo Fanciulli.
© Marta Clinco / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127773455_EYE
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight. In a bid to stop illegal trawling, an Italian fisherman persuaded sculptors to create huge marble artworks – then dropped them in the Mediterranean. Paolo Fanciulli.
© Marta Clinco / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127773449_EYE
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight. In a bid to stop illegal trawling, an Italian fisherman persuaded sculptors to create huge marble artworks – then dropped them in the Mediterranean. Paolo Fanciulli.
© Marta Clinco / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127773451_EYE
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight. In a bid to stop illegal trawling, an Italian fisherman persuaded sculptors to create huge marble artworks Ð then dropped them in the Mediterranean. Paolo Fanciulli fishing in the seas off Talamone, Tuscany.
© Marta Clinco / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127773447_EYE
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight. In a bid to stop illegal trawling, an Italian fisherman persuaded sculptors to create huge marble artworks – then dropped them in the Mediterranean. Paolo Fanciulli.
© Marta Clinco / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127773452_EYE
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight. In a bid to stop illegal trawling, an Italian fisherman persuaded sculptors to create huge marble artworks – then dropped them in the Mediterranean. Paolo Fanciulli.
© Marta Clinco / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127773450_EYE
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight. In a bid to stop illegal trawling, an Italian fisherman persuaded sculptors to create huge marble artworks Ð then dropped them in the Mediterranean. Sea creatures are making themselves at home on the Talamone sculptures.
© Marta Clinco / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127773448_EYE
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight. In a bid to stop illegal trawling, an Italian fisherman persuaded sculptors to create huge marble artworks Ð then dropped them in the Mediterranean. Sea creatures are making themselves at home on the Talamone sculptures.
© Marta Clinco / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127773456_EYE
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight. In a bid to stop illegal trawling, an Italian fisherman persuaded sculptors to create huge marble artworks Ð then dropped them in the Mediterranean. Siren, a sculpture by Giorgio Butini, is overgrown with marine vegetation in the underwater museum off Talamone, Tuscany.
© Marta Clinco / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127773454_EYE
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight
Underwater museum: how 'Paolo the fisherman' made the Med's strangest sight. In a bid to stop illegal trawling, an Italian fisherman persuaded sculptors to create huge marble artworks Ð then dropped them in the Mediterranean. Siren, a sculpture by Giorgio Butini, is overgrown with marine vegetation in the underwater museum off Talamone, Tuscany.
© Marta Clinco / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_43059690_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_43059688_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_43059687_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_43059686_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_43059685_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_43059683_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_43059681_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_43059679_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_43059669_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_43059668_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_43059667_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_43059666_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_43059661_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_43059643_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_43059636_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_43059620_EXC
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
Osborne Reef: A Failed Artificial Reef Of Discarded Tires
About 7,000 feet offshore of Sunrise Boulevard off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, lies an underwater wasteland of rotting tires. This is Osborne Reef, an underwater cemetery of 2 million tires that were placed there in the 1970s as a part of a failed ecological operation to create an artificial reef. Over the years, many of the tires were dislodged by tropical storms and hurricanes and caused damage to nearby existing coral reefs. Forty years later, the tires are still there causing more harm than good in the coastal Florida waters.
Osborn Reef was the brainchild of a non-profit group called Broward Artificial Reef, or BARINC, composed of a group of fishermen, back in the spring of 1972. The idea was to create a reef using old tires that were piling up around the county's landfills and rural areas. This was before recycling caught on. They were convinced that corals would attach and grow on the tires and provide additional habitat for marine life. It was a well intentioned but not a particularly well thought out plan.
With the support of US Army Corps of Engineers and more than 100 privately owned vessels, placement of the tires began over 36 acres of the ocean floor, 7,000 feet offshore in 65 feet of water. The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company provided equipment for the auspicious undertaking, even supporting the project so far as to drop a gold-painted tire to christen the site. The tires were bundled together with steel clips and nylon rope and lowered onto the sea floor. However, the saline waters of the ocean quickly corroded these materials causing the tires to separate, and carried them away by ocean currents and waves. The tires, with their newfound mobility, not only destroyed any marine life that had thus far grown on the tires, it effectively prevented the growth of any new organisms. Besides, the loose tires scoured the ocean floor and damaged existing reefs in the area. Thousands o
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_40600012_REX
Camouflaged sea creatures, Lembeh Strait, Indonesia - May 2014
MANDATORY CREDIT: Ed Brown/Rex Features. IMAGES OUTSIDE OF PRINT VERSION NEWSPAPER SUBSCRIPTIONS. FEES APPLY FOR UNIQUE IPAD USE.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ed Brown/REX (3785761e)
Devil scorpionfish - Inimicus didactylus, well camouflaged against the seabed
Spot The Critter: Camouflaged Sea Creatures
Can you spot the critter?
These amazing images show the lengths - or is that depths? - these undersea creatures go to disguise themselves.
British photographer Ed Brown captured these pictures last month at Lembeh Strait in Indonesia.
He explains: "The pictures were taken on my latest trip to Indonesia, a place called Lembeh Strait, well known to divers for having some of the best "muck diving" in the world. Muck diving can be characterised by the black sand and general bleakness of the seabed. It doesn't look much, but hides some of the weirdest critters you'll find underwater. The occasional coral outcrops house some of the more colourful examples; the pygmy seahorse (Hippocampus bargibanti) being a particular favourite of mine, and only about 2cm big."
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/BEDXWCOKL (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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DUKAS_40600008_REX
Camouflaged sea creatures, Lembeh Strait, Indonesia - May 2014
MANDATORY CREDIT: Ed Brown/Rex Features. IMAGES OUTSIDE OF PRINT VERSION NEWSPAPER SUBSCRIPTIONS. FEES APPLY FOR UNIQUE IPAD USE.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ed Brown/REX (3785761k)
Longarm octopus - Octopus defilippi disappears against the sandy seabed
Spot The Critter: Camouflaged Sea Creatures
Can you spot the critter?
These amazing images show the lengths - or is that depths? - these undersea creatures go to disguise themselves.
British photographer Ed Brown captured these pictures last month at Lembeh Strait in Indonesia.
He explains: "The pictures were taken on my latest trip to Indonesia, a place called Lembeh Strait, well known to divers for having some of the best "muck diving" in the world. Muck diving can be characterised by the black sand and general bleakness of the seabed. It doesn't look much, but hides some of the weirdest critters you'll find underwater. The occasional coral outcrops house some of the more colourful examples; the pygmy seahorse (Hippocampus bargibanti) being a particular favourite of mine, and only about 2cm big."
For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/BEDXWCOKL (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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DUKAS_08690681_REX
MARINE WILDLIFE
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Paul Kay / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 842181a )
A velvet swimming crab sheltering at the side of a dahlia anemone
MARINE WILDLIFE
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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DUKAS_08690691_REX
MARINE WILDLIFE
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Paul Kay / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 842206a )
A burrowing anemone in a sandy sediment seabed
MARINE WILDLIFE
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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DUKAS_08628011_REX
MARINE WILDLIFE
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Paul Kay / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 841941a )
Two scampi (also known by other common names) on a muddy seabed. The second one is emerging from its burrow
MARINE WILDLIFE
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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DUKAS_08690664_REX
MARINE WILDLIFE
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Paul Kay / SplashdownDirect / Rex Features ( 841937a )
A swimming (or harbour) crab sitting on a muddy sand seabed
MARINE WILDLIFE
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX
