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Pause, reflect and reconnect with the natural world through images that celebrate nature’s awe-inspiring beauty and urge us to protect it.
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Shane Gross (Canada) witnesses a peppered moray eel very much in its element hunting for carrion at low tide.
It took Shane many attempts over several weeks to document this rarely photographed behaviour.
At first the eels were elusive. Once Shane realised that they were scavenging for dead fish, he waited.
His patience was soon rewarded when these three eels appeared.
Peppered moray eels are well adapted to the intertidal zone, which is underwater during high tide and exposed during low tide.
They hunt both above and below the water’s surface using their keen senses of smell and sight. They can stay out of water for more than 30 seconds.

Canada
Shane is a professional marine conservation photojournalist. He’s photographed everything from sharks, whales and crocodiles to seahorses, nudibranchs and tadpoles. Through his work, Shane wants to shine a light on the impact, both positive and negative, people are having on the oceans and on freshwater ecosystems. He’s an Associate Fellow with the International League of Conservation Photographers and a founding member of the Canadian Conservation Photographers Collective.
Help us harness the power of photography to advance scientific knowledge, spread awareness of important issues and nurture a global love for nature.


