Michael Patrick O'Neill Photography, Inc.

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  • Non-native, invasive and venemous Volitans Lionfish (Pterois volitans) on the wreck of the U-352, a German submarine sunk by the US Coast Guard during World War II. Originally from the Indo-Pacific, the lionfish is fully established along the east coast of the US, from Florida to Long Island, NY.
    8148.jpg
  • Non-native, invasive and venemous Volitans Lionfish (Pterois volitans) on the wreck of the U-352, a German submarine sunk by the US Coast Guard during World War II. Originally from the Indo-Pacific, the lionfish is fully established along the east coast of the US, from Florida to Long Island, NY.
    8119.jpg
  • Volitans Lionfish (Pterois volitans) on the wreck of the U-352
    8145.jpg
  • Corals and other marine life slowly recycle and transform man-made garbage and debris into small artificial reefs on the sandy underwater slopes of Lembeh Strait, Indonesia.
    3919MPO.jpg
  • Corals and other marine life slowly recycle and transform man-made garbage and debris into small artificial reefs on the sandy underwater slopes of Lembeh Strait, Indonesia.
    3919MPO.jpg
  • Dozens of Bristle Worms, Hermodice carunculata, scavenge on a dead Spotted Moray Eel, Gymnothorax moringa, on the bottom of the Lake Worth Lagoon, Singer Island, FL
    MPO_Bristle_Worm_Florida-2.jpg
  • Dozens of Bristle Worms, Hermodice carunculata, scavenge on a dead Spotted Moray Eel, Gymnothorax moringa, on the bottom of the Lake Worth Lagoon, Singer Island, FL
    MPO_Bristle_Worm_Florida.jpg
  • Corals and other marine life slowly recycle and transform man-made garbage and debris into small artificial reefs on the sandy underwater slopes of Lembeh Strait, Indonesia.
    3918MPO.jpg
  • Corals and other marine life slowly recycle and transform man-made garbage and debris into small artificial reefs on the sandy underwater slopes of Lembeh Strait, Indonesia.
    3915MPO.jpg
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