Not just Shark Pictures:
Elasmodiver contains photos of sharks, skates, rays, and chimaera's
from around the world. It began as a simple web based field guide to
help divers find the best places to encounter different species of
sharks and rays but it has slowly evolved into a much larger project
containing information on all aspects of shark diving and
photography. There are now more than a thousand shark pictures
and sections on shark evolution, biology, and conservation. There is
a large library of reviewed shark books, a constantly outdated shark
taxonomy page, a monster list of shark links, and deeper in the site
there are numerous articles and stories about shark encounters.
Elasmodiver is now so difficult to check for updates, that new
information and pictures are listed
on an Elasmodiver Updates Page that
can be accessed here:
If you're
looking for a broader range of marine life pictures the following
links represent a new area that contains pictures on other marine
organisms and on marine habitats. This expansion of Elasmodiver is
in its first stages but will eventually include pages on everything
from sea stars to nudibranches. Creating this portal will take time
and for now it consists of a token offering of fish pictures. Please
return regularly to enjoy the progress.
Sharks and rays are amazing creatures. They inspire many emotions among
divers, fishermen, movie watchers, aquarium visitors, surfers, and anyone
else who has the chance to interact with them. The emotions that they conjure
up in us include awe, fear, delight, repulsion, excitement, curiosity
and terror but the one thing that sharks rarely inspire is boredom or
indifference. Why they engender such strong feelings among us varies from a
primordial fear of large predators to a respect for their incredible
abilities and a deep appreciation of their power and grace. What ever reason
you have for your interest in sharks and for visiting Elasmodiver, I hope you
enjoy all the shark pictures and information that is contained here and that
you take away and pass on a renewed desire to help these incredible creatures
survive in an increasingly hostile environment.
Thank you for visiting Elasmodiver,
Andy Murch
- Shark Photographer and Web Master
ORDER TORPEDINIFORMES
TORPEDO RAYS, COFFIN RAYS, ELECTRIC RAYS
& SLEEPER RAYS
All pictures are the property of Andy Murch
or other contributing photographers. No pictures may be copied or reproduced
without prior consent. If you wish
to acquire high resolution images for commercial purposes please contact
Elasmodiver.
All available pictures of sharks and rays are listed in
THE SHARKIVE
I am writing this shark blog while sailing from St Maarten in the Caribbean to
Mallorca in the Mediterranean. I have been hired to help deliver a 103ft
Swiss super yacht named Gliss. It is my first transatlantic crossing and
everything seems to be going well on the surface but of course I prefer to be under the surface so for me the whole experience
is novel but a
little frustrating.
We have been at sea for almost two weeks. There is plenty of food on the
boat but each day the more carnivorous members of the crew trail lures in
the hope of catching some fresh fish. I have warned them that if they pull
up a shark I will cut the line but there appears to be little chance of
that. What is disturbing is that after hundreds of hours of trawling they
have failed to get a single bite. Perhaps they are just terrible fishermen
but the process isn't rocket science so I can only assume that the seas are
now basically empty. It is a sad testament to the state of the oceans.
Since there is no marine life to document except for the occasional flying
fish, I am using my down time to make as many changes to Elasmodiver as
I can. Consequently, there is a new shark story entitled
The Swell Shark's Last Stand in the
shark stories section and
a new page on the Thornback Ray which will be the last
new species that I upload until I can get
underwater and take some more shark pictures.
I have been reading up on South Africa which will hopefully be the
subject of my next big shark photography adventure after I find my feet in
Europe. The plan is to head to Cape Town to shoot as many catshark species
as I can find before I run out of time and resources and then fly back to Spain to
work on mega-yachts again for the rest of the summer.
So, if anyone reading this blog dives in the Cape Town area (or anywhere in SA for that
matter) I would appreciate any advice that I can get on dive sites there. This
type of helpful communication was the original reason for the existence of
Elasmodiver - to promote the two way flow of information that helps divers
find sharks and rays around the world. One of the excellent letters on South
African shark diving that I received some time ago is posted in the
shark talk section. It includes a very
detailed summary of diving options along the South African coastline and it
is packed with useful tidbits and contact details that would be hard to
gather unless you lived or regularly dove in a particular place.
This kind of information whether long and detailed or just a couple of
sentences in a email is always welcome especially if it is about an obscure
location that the average diver would not think of going to. So if you live
in Suriname, Vladivostok, Chile, Norway, or anywhere else with a coastline
that has sharks and rays, drop me a line and tell me what is there.
Nothing to me is more inspiring than an email from someone I haven't met,
describing somewhere that I have never been and telling me where I can find
a shark or ray that I have yet to photograph. This is how new adventures are
born.
Andy is a
freelance shark photographer and the
Staff Photographer at
Shark Diver Magazine. He is also the Creator of
Elasmodiver.com which is one of the largest sources of information
about sharks and rays on the internet.