apakah kalian tega keindahan ini hancur?
apakah kalian tega keindahan ini hancur?
ha itu di atas ada gambar kapal tenggelam tuh..kapal apaan tuh..ada hartanya ga?
e itu ngambil setting dimana?
No matter how many times the colors of the seasons change,these feelings will never wither, swaying like a flower.
If this is just a dream, then let it be a dream. I don't care.
My heart, filled with loving radiance...Forever thinking of you
iya itu titanic kalo mau gw bisa ambil jepretan titanicnya
titanic kok kecil kayaknya? ah gw klo nyelem juga burem ga kliatan
titanic emang kelelep di laut indo y??gw baru tau...dasar bloso..wkwkwkwk
Liat pic 1 langsung seger mata gw .. nice pic bro !
indah sangat indah tp mengapa ?? mengapa kt manusia2 tega sekali menghancurkan kehidupan laut
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jgn kbanyakan nonton kartun woy! kita harus renungkan kesalahan manusia ke alam laut
::Nambahin::
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Beware the Yellow Dart
Photograph by Tim Laman
The Pacific blue tang (Paracanthurus hepatus)—also known as the artist's pallette surgeonfish due to the shape of the dark patch on its body—was immortalized by the character Dory in the film Finding Nemo. Unlike that benignly daft creature, this real-life surgeonfish in Indonesia carries a sharp retractable blade of bone near the base of its tail. The tail's yellow blaze gives potential foes fair warning: Armed and dangerous.
Patient Predation
Photograph by Tim Laman
A leaf scorpionfish (Taenianotus triacanthus) scouts for errant fairy basslets in Fijian waters. This ambush predator can change its color to blend with its surroundings. It then lies still, waiting for prey to pass by. "We saw this fish pounce a couple of times," says photographer Tim Laman. "His mouth shot out and back in a fraction of a second."
Colorful World Below the Waves
Photograph by Tim Laman
For reasons known only to nature, color explodes across coral reefs, making them Earth's most vivid landscapes. Here in the shallows of a Fijian reef, brilliant soft corals wave in reds, pinks, and yellows as schools of fairy basslets flash orange and violet hues. The basslets' different colors aid in species identification, mate recognition, and even camouflage as individuals mass against the kaleidoscope of the reef. What humans see lighted by a photographer's bright strobe may look altogether different in natural light through the eyes of reef creatures. Scientists are now beginning to learn how wavelengths of light (and therefore color) change through water at different distances, and—more important—how fish see colors and what messages they might communicate.
The Stories Stripes Can Tell
Photograph by Tim Laman
Bold horizontal bands of black, white, and yellow pop out on a well-lighted sweetlips (Plectorhinchus polytaenia) in Indonesia. The pattern and colors actually help distort the fish's outline when seen in natural light at a distance through water, helping the animal disappear from the view of potential predators. Nearby, a neon cleaner wrasse also wears stark stripes. These little fish eat parasites off the flesh and mouths of other fish. The wrasse's stripes may signal that it is a useful helper rather than a ready meal. Neon wrasses vary in coloration geographically. A yellow cast near the head (as shown here) indicates an Indonesian species; in Fiji many neon wrasses have a yellow blaze near the tail.
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