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a fish hides in the rocks of the Adriatic Sea near Split Croatia
Goose barnacles clustered on piece of oceanic flotsam washed up on beach.
small stone on the beach
Barnacles on Rock
Fresh barnacles close up view
Top view of a black slate table with mollusks and crustacean ready for cooking on a wood kitchen counter top. Ingredients for cooking like olive oil, salt and pepper, garlic, lemon and herbs are all around the frame. DSRL studio photo taken with Canon EOS 5D Mk II and Canon EF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II USM Telephoto Zoom Lens
Mussels on rocks on the Tofino Coast.
Goose barnacles known as perceves. Famous seafood from crustaceans family
Seafood barnacle clinging to a rock over the ocean.
Barnacles and mussels attached to a rock in a tidal pool along the coastline of Newport Beach, California during the winter.
Freshwater underwater close-up photography of a zebra mussel.
Pacific tide pool
Hermit crab and tropical beaches
High angle view of a moon jellyfish ( aurelia aurita ) and green algae aquatic animal on the North Sea beach .
Common mussels underwater on a rock, Atlantic ocean, Spain, Galicia, Pontevedra province
Raw mussels
Horned Blenny-Parablennius Intermedius-Kammzahnschleimfisch
A colony of mussels are attached to a rock on a beach in California.
A macro shot of the small black crab on the rock near the sea in Portugal, Porto
The tide pools show a variety of life that lives in the pacific waters. Crustaceans, hermit crabs, shellfish, and a variety of other species made for a great day of exploration.
Purple rock crab (Leptograpsus variegatus) colorful crustaceans, male and female sit hidden between rocks by the water. Sea animals camouflaged near the shore.
Mussels clinging to a rock at low tide.
(Tectura sp.) Limpets are mollusks living in the intertidal to subtidal zones.  They can be found on rocks above the tide zone along shorelines.  They come in a variety of shapes and designs.  Their range is from northern Alaska to southern California.  They feed at night eating seaweed.  They are often eaten by sea stars.
Padina pavonica, commonly known as the peacock's tail macrophotography.
Many mussels attached to a rocdk in the Pacific ocean, Crystal Cove state park,California
Daytime top view close-up of Seaweed (Fucus Vesiculosus) at the Dutch Wadden (the Wadden Sea, a World Heritage Site) near Termunterzijl {Groningen), shallow DOF
Beadlet anemone or sea tomato growing between sea snails, limpets and barnacles
A group of Brachiopods on a fossil Ammonite. The close-up image shows several fossils from the jurassic period found in the canton of Aargau.
Shells on rock limpets and red shell
Close-up of Pacific Coast tidepool sea life.\n\nTaken at Santa Cruz, California, USA.
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