Palm Beach Dive Thread

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Perhaps you should ask for a partial refund from the tour boat captain, as well? LOL.

Seriously, the reef dive was so bad you could only do half of it and skipped the third? I would have been disappointed with the change of venue, but I myself probably would have just blown bubble rings or something, plus watching new divers flail around underwater has to provide some level of amusement?
What does the tour boat have to do with any of this?

I don't like reef dives, I find them lackluster, relatively devoid of life and just plain boring.

What you would do and what I did are not the same thing. Besides I don't even know how to blow bubble rings even if I wanted to spend 45 minutes doing it. No, watching new divers bumble around and destroy what's left of the reefs is not my idea of entertainment.
 
Hi @gamon

Your experience is also hard for me to understand. I dive frequently in Palm Beach. Most of the reef dives are quite good with an array of sea life. In general, I would rather dive the reefs than the Corridor or Governor's. Do you happen to know the two reef dives that Stuart Scuba did the day of your trip? Most of the Palm Beach dives have a dive time of an hour, were yours 45 min?

I did a reef 3 tanker in Jupiter today and had a very good time. I am doing 2 tankers in Palm Beach tomorrow through Thursday and will report back.
 
Do you happen to know the two reef dives that Stuart Scuba did the day of your trip? Most of the Palm Beach dives have a dive time of an hour, were yours 45 min?

I don't know the maximum dive times for the two reef dives as I only did 25 minutes on the first which was Flower Garden, and I was on the boat for the second and not paying attention to how long the divers were down for (I don't know which one it was).
 
There is a website called inaturalist where individuals can upload observations they have made of any species on earth. To date there are over 236 million observations(mostly photos), 515,000 species documented, and over 8.6 million people signed up and making those observations.
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I joined inaturalist on Oct 11, 2021. Since then I have made 1,792 observations of 1084 species. Most of my observations are underwater in southeast Florida. Some of the projects with my observations include but are not limited to, The Blue Heron Bridge Project, Sea slugs of Florida, and Marine Fishes of the Caribbean. (Bluebell Tunicate Left)

Any member can make a "project". The projects are a method to organzie a set observations. It can be for a given place, a given time, a given taxonomic classification, a given set of individuals making observations, or some combination of the preceeding. A project particularly apropo to this thread would be the Reefs Of South Florida&the Florida Keys (I have about 600 observations here). This project was started July 2, 2018 has 11383 observations, 974 species documented, 315 observers, 791 identifiers, and 142 members. This project does not require membership in order for observations to be added, some projects do require membership for observations to be added.

Here is a rough break down of species in the Reefs Of South Florida&the Florida Keys project;

Ray Finned Fish360
Elasmobranchs12
Mollusks220
Cnidarians92
Crustaceans92
Sponges57
Echinoderms42
Plants32
Segmented Worms21
Bryozoans5
Turtles4
Tunicates13
Mammals2
Flatworms3
Horseshoe Worms1
Kelp, and Diatoms2

Juvenile Short Bigeye Below
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When I do a REEF survey of one hour duration on a reef in south east Florida, a low count would be 55 species, a high count would be >100 species. That is just for ray finned fish and elasmobranchs. If I did a survey of anything I could positively identify the species count would max out in the 160-180 species range. NOT because the species are limited, but because my ablitiy to look, recognzie, and record is limited. I would not be able to duplicate count in one hour on any terrestrial habitat on the earth.
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Coral Reefs are considered to be the highest biodiversity ecosystems on the planet. The reefs in southeast Florida illustrate this magnificently.

Longjaw Squirrelfish right






Bluelip Hamlet Below

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Opp's wrong thread
moved to Jupiter thread
 
At low tide,,,,,It's tough to find deep enough water to get into/out of the Jupiter inlet. Red curve & waves break is the amount of shallow sand that is built up. Turtle season May 1st means no dredging till next year at the earliest. I've seen boats do a sudden stop hitting the sand bar out there.

View attachment 895059

That explains why JDC frequently comes along the shore going into/out of the inlet. I saw the wave break but didn't realize how shallow it had become. I suspect the will dredge early next year?
 
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