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Flabellina affinis_July 2025
 CanonRF100 1/200  f13 iso100
By Antonio Venturelli
posted 00:24 CST Today (within the last hour)
Breathtaking encounter with a humpback whale mother and its calf.

Each year  a population of humpback whales  living in the antarctic  migrates north towards the equator along the coast of Mozambique. Warmer waters are more favorable for mating...
By Paul Krassnitzer
posted (last week)
A humpback whale mother and her calf. Each year a group of humpback whales migrates along the coast of Mozambique
By Paul Krassnitzer
posted (last week)
Cratena nudibranchs_August 2025
 CanonRF100 1/200 f11 iso100
By Antonio Venturelli
posted (last week)
Verconia nivalis nudibranch_March 2025
 CanonRF100 1/200 f18 iso100
By Antonio Venturelli
posted (Last month)
Every winter a group of female bullsharks come to this area to give birth  season goes from November untill mid march.
By Ramon Magana
posted (Last month)

Underwater Photo Location: Ricketts Point

Underwater Photo Location: Ricketts Point

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From the Official Parks Victoria Website:
Ricketts Point Marine Sanctuary encompasses a diversity of habitats and an associated diversity of flora and fauna within a relatively small area. It is an outstanding example of a sandstone reef habitat that occurs in northern Port Phillip Bay and is also an important site for migratory and resident bird species. It is easily accessible from Melbourne and is a
popular site for snorkelling, diving and education.

The Ricketts Point Marine Sanctuary at Beaumaris in northern Port Phillip Bay is approximately twenty kilometres from the centre of Melbourne. The Sanctuary includes nearly three kilometres of coast line and the majority of the Sanctuary is in shallow waters ( < 5 m depth).

Facts about Ricketts Point
  • It is in Australia
  • The typical depth is 0-10 Metres 0-30 Feet.
  • The typical visibility is 0-3 Metres 0-10 Feet.
Dive types
shore

Marine Life
small


Photo facilities
macrowideangle

by Bill Van Eyk
Ricketts Point, snapping shrimp-Alpheus sp. : The fingers at the end of the larger claw are used to make a loud snapping noise to stun prey and scare divers! Not much is know about this species.

by Bill Van Eyk
Small snapper shrimp; Alpheus novaezealandiae. Snapping shrimps or pistol shrimps are immediately distinguished from other families by having one claw much larger than the other, the larger claw cylindrical and with a parrot-beak-like finger.

by Bill Van Eyk
Flathead sitting still in lettuce seaweed.

by Bill Van Eyk
Snapping shrimp - true it snapped me! Alpheus sp.

by Bill Van Eyk
Calamari Swimming in formation -

by Bill Van Eyk
The Southern Hulafish (Trachinops caudimaculatus) is a temperate water fish species is a member of the family Plesiopidae which includes the ‘Blue Devils’ and ‘Hulafishes’.

by Bill Van Eyk
Stingray with penetrating stare . . .

by Bill Van Eyk
Curious Leather Jacket.

by Shelley Hooper
Tiny slug at Ricketts Point, Beaumauris, Victoria.
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