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  • Sea lions can be quite inquisitive. While diving with a friend in Monterey, California, I would tap two rocks together, to get the attention the sea lions. Sometimes their groups would completely engulf us, and a few braver sea lions would come right up to us to figure out what we were.
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  • After a so-so dive offshore of Monterey, our dive team was given an amazing safety stop as large sea nettle jellies began drifting by. Usually the jellyfish come in after large algal blooms, so to be in the middle of a jelly smack with clear water was quite a treat.
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  • This large white shark was the most active of the sharks our group saw while cage diving at Guadalupe Island, Mexico. While the warmer waters kept many of the sharks in deeper water for the duration of our trip, on a few occasions this shark ventured up for a closer look.
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  • Two scary looking but misunderstood animals in one shot. A moray eel grins as it gets cleaned by a clarionfish, while a white-tipped reef shark swims by in the background. Photo taken at San Benedicto Island, Mexico
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  • A chain of sea salps drifts by underneath a kelp canopy near Monterey, California. It may seem hard to believe, but these alien looking organisms are related to humans, both being classed in the phylum Chordata.
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Joe Platko Photography

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