This is official site of Black Water Dive® produced by photographer Ryo Minemizu. Black Water Dive® is a kind of night diving. We are setting up underwater lights of high-color rendering on the sea bottom of night that while considering tides, times, places. The creature which appears is mainly juveniles and larvae. All is fascinating, and it's not to be seen at daytime or regular night diving. It will be your first experience. This site will introduce the state of the event and the creatures seen and also future of BWD schedules. *"BWD"stands for Black Water Dive®.*Black Water Dive® is a registered trademark of Ryo Minemizu.

2016年8月21日日曜日

Larva of Bothus myriaster Temminck & Schlegel, 1846

Taken at Kume-island Black Water Dive® on 29th july 2016. This larva is not few. If anything, it appears many on the surface thure the year.

Japanese common name; Hoshi-Daruma Garei
English name; Oval Flounder
Scientific name; Bothus myriaster Temminck & Schlegel,1846

Meristic Characters - D 87; A 67; P9; V 38; (This picture)

  • B. myriaster - D 85-97; A 61-73; P1 8-10(Eye side); V 37-39.

Larva of Bothus myriaster
Larva of Bothus myriaster Temminck & Schlegel 1846 TL:about 50mm
P1 9 (Eye side)
















Related species; (in Japan)

  • Bothus mancus (Broussonet, 1782) - D 96-102; A 74-81; P11-13(Eye side); V 39-40.
  • Bothus pantherinus (Rüppell, 1831) - D 88-100; A 64-72; P1 10-11(Eye side); V 37-38.

REFERENCES:
Nakabo, T. (ed.), 2013. Fishes of Japan with pictorial keys to the species, third edition. Tokai University Press, Kanagawa, Pp, 2428. (in Japanese).

Okiyama M. (ed), 2014 An Atlas of Early Stage Fishes in Japan Second Edition Tokai University Press, Japan. :Pp,1912. (in Japanese).

2016年7月20日水曜日

Larva of Cirripectes quagga (Perciformes, Blennioidei, Blenniidae)

This larva is Cirripectes quagga (Fowler & Ball, 1924) . Japanese common name is "Marcus-Mino-kaeruuo". It has been distributed in South Japan too, but for some reason of ecology photo report seems not yet. It was shooting at Okinawa mainland in late May. This ecology photo might first be at Japan.

Cirripectes quagga Black Water Dive®
TL: about 36mm

Meristic CharactersD Ⅶ, 15; A Ⅱ, 16;  P1 15; P2 Ⅰ,4; C ⅱ, 9, ⅱ; V 10+21.
(*Nakabo, T. (ed.), 2013)

soft rays of the caudal fin is branch off.
Fluorescent green dye has been distributed in the pectoral fins.


REFERENCES:

Nakabo, T. (ed.), 2013. Fishes of Japan with pictorial keys to the species, third edition. Tokai University Press, Kanagawa, Pp, 2428. (in Japanese).

Okiyama M. (ed), 2014 An Atlas of Early Stage Fishes in Japan Second Edition Tokai University Press, Japan. :Pp,1912. (in Japanese).

2016年5月14日土曜日

Tremoctopus gracilis (Eydoux & Souleyet, 1852) has tentacles of jellyfish to arms.

This time, I could shooting valuable male ecology of Tremoctopus gracilis (Eydoux & Souleyet, 1852) at Palau. That is probably of a third case in the world.

Tremoctopus gracilis is a very unique an octopus of open ocean-swimming with web on the arm. The male is very small compared to the female, So far, It's have been most captured in such investigation by the plankton net.

The first discovery is by David Paul of Melbourne University. It was the world's first ecological photographed at Great Barrier Reef, in Australia. after that, first report is by Dr Norman in 2002.
At that time, it has been reported to have the tentacles of cnidarians such as jellyfish. Then, that this species is holding tentacles at selectively Portuguese Man O' War (Physalia physalis) has also been re-reported at Tree of Life Web Project. So far, how to use of this jellyfish tentacles, it has been considered for the defense or attack.

Blanket Octopus - Black Water Dive®
Tremoctopus gracilis (Eydoux & Souleyet, 1852) ,male, ML:15mm
Blanket Octopus - Black Water Dive®
seems to be tentacles of Physalia physalis on the sucker arm.

Related report

Larva of Blanket Octopus
http://www.blackwaterdive.net/2016/01/larva-of-blanket-octopustremoctopus.html



REFERENCES:

Sweeney, M.J., Roper, C.F.E., Mangold, K.M., Clarke, M.R., and Boletzky, S. v. 1992. 'Larval' and juvenile cephalopods: a manual for their identification. Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology - No. 513. 282pp.

Norman, M.D. 2000. Cephalopods A World Guide. Frankfurt, Germany, IKAN Publishing. 320 pp.

Jereb,P., Roper,C.F.E.,Norman,M.D.,Julian,K.F., 2014. Cephalopods of the World. An annotated and illustrated catalogue of Cephalopod species known to date Volume 3 Octopods and Vampire Squids. FAO Species Catalogue for Fishery Purposes No.4, Vol.3. 382pp.

Paralarva of Thysanoteuthis rhombus Troschel, 1857

This is paralarva of Thysanoteuthis rhombus Troschel, 1857. It was taken in the Ogasawara Islands.

It has transparency body and do the very unique pose that along the arm on top of the mantle.

According to (Okutani, 2015) and (Sweeney et al, 1992) are this squid distributed in the until vicinity of the south and North latitude 40 degrees of the whole world.

The adult is in the middle range of 450-650m.
Mantle length of the adult is about generally 300-850mm.

Octopoteuthis sicula Ruppell, 1844 - Black Water Water®
Side view is paralarva of Thysanoteuthis rhombus Troschel, 1857  (ML;about 7mm)

Octopoteuthis sicula Ruppell, 1844 - Black Water Water®
Front view is paralarva of Thysanoteuthis rhombus Troschel, 1857  (ML;about 7mm)

REFERENCES:

Voss NA, Stephen SJ, Dong Zh (1992). Family Cranchiidae, Prosch, 1849. In: Sweeney MJ, Roper CFE, Mangold KM, Clarke MR, von Boletzky S (ed) Larval and juvenile cephalopods: A manual for their identification. Smithson Contrib Zool 513, pp 187-210.

Okutani, T (2015). New editing World squids picture book Web Edition - National squid processing industry cooperatives(In Japanese) pp 194.

Tree of Life Web Project - Thysanoteuthis rhombus


* Previously introduced as larva of Octopoteuthis sicula, it turned out to be Thysanoteuthis rhombus so I will correct it and resend it. (2016/11/16)