Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Rare Marble Mouthed Frogfish in North Borneo

What was expected to be an average nudibranch sightseeing dive on Mid Reef turned into a particularly exciting encounter with a Marble Mouthed Frogfish (Lophiocharon lithinostomus).

Having visited the sites wreck at 19m we began our slow ascent combing the gently sloping reef searching for critters. Today's visibility was particularly poor averaging only 2-3m a common occurrence at this location. Richard's single bang of the tank indicated a special find, at first myself and Sanai both professional divers and experienced guides couldn't recognize what he was
marble-blog
pointing at but the squeaks of joy soon came through the regulators as the find materialized !

Often with cryptic critters we would notice an eye before seeing the creature itself but its eye's appeared particularly lifeless and as a result they were barely recognizable, infact at first we thought it was dead.

We both knew at the time this small sized Froggy was special, Richard photographed him and even when the strobes fired the creature did not flinch, continuing to conceal its identity.

Identification of Frogfish is particularly tricky because many species have the ability to change colour to suit their environment and sizes vary within the same family.
Marble-mouthed-blog
The most important
distinguishing factor is their Illicium (Rod) and the lure that sits on the tip. Notice that our individual has a long twig like Illicium with no actual lure on the tip, this provided vital clues to its identity and combined with location, size and habitat we are confident to say its a Marbled Mouthed Frogfish.
Distribution.
North Borneo and neighboring areas of the Philippines, considered very rare
Habitat.
Brackish waters
Location
. Mid Reef, Tunku Abdul Rahman Park, South China Sea, Sabah, Borneo
Depth.
10.8m
Frogfish Size.
Max 6cm
Date.
23rd January 2007
Notes.
Particularly lifeless, very cryptic

Click for more information on Frogfish or use our Marine Biology links to the right.


Rare Marble Mouthed Frogfish in North Borneo

What was expected to be an average nudibranch sightseeing dive on Mid Reef turned into a particularly exciting encounter with a Marble Mouthed Frogfish (Lophiocharon lithinostomus).

Having visited the sites wreck at 19m we began our slow ascent combing the gently sloping reef searching for critters. Today's visibility was particularly poor averaging only 2-3m a common occurrence at this location. Richard's single bang of the tank indicated a special find, at first myself and Sanai both professional divers and experienced guides couldn't recognize what he was
marble-blog
pointing at but the squeaks of joy soon came through the regulators as the find materialized !

Often with cryptic critters we would notice an eye before seeing the creature itself but its eye's appeared particularly lifeless and as a result they were barely recognizable, infact at first we thought it was dead.

We both knew at the time this small sized Froggy was special, Richard photographed him and even when the strobes fired the creature did not flinch, continuing to conceal its identity.

Identification of Frogfish is particularly tricky because many species have the ability to change colour to suit their environment and sizes vary within the same family.
Marble-mouthed-blog
The most important
distinguishing factor is their Illicium (Rod) and the lure that sits on the tip. Notice that our individual has a long twig like Illicium with no actual lure on the tip, this provided vital clues to its identity and combined with location, size and habitat we are confident to say its a Marbled Mouthed Frogfish.
Distribution.
North Borneo and neighboring areas of the Philippines, considered very rare
Habitat.
Brackish waters
Location
. Mid Reef, Tunku Abdul Rahman Park, South China Sea, Sabah, Borneo
Depth.
10.8m
Frogfish Size.
Max 6cm
Date.
23rd January 2007
Notes.
Particularly lifeless, very cryptic

Click for more information on Frogfish or use our Marine Biology links to the right.


Monday, January 8, 2007

An Elephant Encounter

Elephant news 2
Pygmy Elephants Crossing the Kinabatangan River

On a recent visit to the Kinabatangan with Bilit Adventure Lodge we were treated to a rare sighting of Elephants crossing the river. Nearing the end of our late afternoon river cruise, on route to our accommodation and already having seen a wealth of wildlife, our boatman sighted two Bornean Pygmy Elephants in the river. At first we thought perhaps they were taking an evening bath but soon realized a crossing was taking place. To our amazement we witnessed groups of around 20 at a time gather together on the bank, placing the juveniles at the centre of the herd then swim across the river. In total over 100 passed the bow of our small boat. Truly spectacular !

Elephant-news
Elephant-2-news
For more information on the region and Pygmy Elephants Of Borneo please visit our Kinabatagan page.

An Elephant Encounter

Elephant news 2
Pygmy Elephants Crossing the Kinabatangan River

On a recent visit to the Kinabatangan with Bilit Adventure Lodge we were treated to a rare sighting of Elephants crossing the river. Nearing the end of our late afternoon river cruise, on route to our accommodation and already having seen a wealth of wildlife, our boatman sighted two Bornean Pygmy Elephants in the river. At first we thought perhaps they were taking an evening bath but soon realized a crossing was taking place. To our amazement we witnessed groups of around 20 at a time gather together on the bank, placing the juveniles at the centre of the herd then swim across the river. In total over 100 passed the bow of our small boat. Truly spectacular !

Elephant-news
Elephant-2-news
For more information on the region and Pygmy Elephants Of Borneo please visit our Kinabatagan page.