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Blue-Eyed Squid Ilot Ua New Caledonia
Nouvelle Calédonie

I like squid. A bit of a double meaning there as I not only appreciate watching these intelligent and strange social creatures in the lagoon, I also enjoy eating them. But this sphere image is about the live ones.

I have, ever since I started doing sphere images, always wanted to take a sphere image of a school of squid. Freddy and I have seen them, from time to time, while snorkeling but they have always somehow known that Freddy and I are predators that munch on their tender flesh. So they are exceedingly difficult to get close to and are capable of swimming (jetting really) much faster than me. Anyway, you can't do a sphere image when swimming after something; you need to be stay in one spot and turn around.

We were snorkeling along the face of the fringing reef at Ua when I spotted a shark sleeping in a coral cave. It was a nice bit of reef, very colorful, so I stopped and began taking a sphere image with my trusty little Gopro Hero3. The plan was to do a complete sphere of the coral and then maybe get Freddy to go close enough to the sleeping shark to get it to do a swim-by for the sphere photo. Can you see the shark in the sphere image? He's in one of the caves.

But it was one of those days when coordination was not my best feature. I was thrashing around a bit, there was a little current, I couldn't seem to keep my fins or arms out of the camera's field of view. Whatever, I fiddled around, turned around and around, adjusted the camera, did it again.

One of the more fascinating features of squids - and octopus - is their curiosity. We had seen a big school of squid earlier in the day but they would not (as usual) let us get close to them, swimming off into the blue if I even looked in their direction. But apparently they were close enough to see my bizarre spinning dance. And apparently they found this interesting enough to come closer to see what I was doing. 

I was totally absorbed trying to keep the camera in exactly the same spot while turning around and avoiding making splashes so I didn't even notice the squids until I looked up and saw them all around me. Looking at me with those big blue eyes. 

Squid actually communicate by changing colors and they change their colors to make themselves harder to see; like a chameleon only much faster; almost instantaneous. Notice that the squid hovering over the darker area of the reef are dark colored, the ones backlit by the sun are much lighter, and the ones in the deeper water fade to almost the same blue as the lagoon water.

Think about that a minute. Because it means that the squid were changing their color to make themselves harder for me to see them but they had to realize what they would look like to ME. Like some of them were thinking, "I'm on the sunny side of that monster so I need to be light-colored." Others were thinking, "From where that monster is I have a dark reef behind me". Which means they were adjusting their colors to MY point of view. 

That's pretty perceptive of them. It's hard to think of that as "instinctive" behavior, because they need to realize where my eyes are, where I am actually looking (or might look) and what's behind them from my point of view.

So please enjoy these lovely blue-eyed squids in their idyllic coral reef domain and think of them the next time you see Calamari on the menu.

Copyright: Richard Chesher
Type: Spherical
Resolution: 12000x6000
Taken: 02/10/2013
Chargée: 07/10/2013
Published: 07/10/2013
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Tags: squid; underwater; underwater scenic; shark; lagoon; coral reef; gopro; hero3; world heritage site; new caledonia; ua; ilot ua; 5 isles; south lagoon
More About Nouvelle Calédonie

Une Nation du Pacifique Sud, la plus proche de l'Australie et de la Nouvelle Zélande. Une chaîne de hautes montagnes, d'impressionnantes cascades et de nombreuses rivières avec une flore et une faune variée et souvent unique au monde - C'est le paradis de la randonnée pédestre ou équestre ainsi que de l'excursion en véhicule tout-terrain.Le plus grand lagon du monde, peuplé d'une faune tropicale endémique particulièrement riche, avec des récifs et des populations de poissons rares et protégées. Des centaines d'épaves sous-marines, des îlots, de nombreuses plages de sable blanc. La population calédonienne est issue d'un large brassage culturel : Mélanésiens, Européens, Polynésiens, Vietnamiens, Chinois, Japonais, et la langue et culture française. La Nouvelle-Calédonie est dotée de très bonnes infrastructures médicales et sociales. Une infrastructure touristique qui offre un large éventail de types d'hébergement allant de l'hôtel 5 étoiles au camping aménagé en passant par l'accueil en milieu tribal, les chambres d'hôtes, les refuges et l'auberge de jeunesse.


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