klausi
Contributor
I am lucky enough to be able to night dive on Negros Island regularly. The sand/soft bottom habitats ("muck") are unsurpassed imo.
These days the water is so rich in plankton that it feeds a lot of the critters the Philippine muck diving is famous for. This week, during a single dive, we saw ocellated frogfish, a ghost pipefish, a crab feeding on a fire worm (spicy!) and three crabs doing what seemed like mating.
The footage I got is here:
These days the water is so rich in plankton that it feeds a lot of the critters the Philippine muck diving is famous for. This week, during a single dive, we saw ocellated frogfish, a ghost pipefish, a crab feeding on a fire worm (spicy!) and three crabs doing what seemed like mating.
The footage I got is here: