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A view of a part of the St. Peter Port, Guernsey, Channel Islands, Great Britain waterfront on the night of 22 March 2008.  This image was taken exactly one week before Earth Hour when many of the lights of St. Peter Port were switched off for one hour to determine the saving of electricity.  This image was taken using a Canon A640 digital camera with a small plastic tripod.  The tripod was sheltered by a harbour wall as it was windy.
File No. 220308 3844 
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
Sealordphotography
Albert statue 220308 3845 smg
This colony of the bryozoan Watersipora subtorquata is the first record of this species in the British Isles.  It was found growing on the south side of a pontoon running along the southern wall of the Queen Elizabeth II marina in St. Peter Port, Guernsey, Channel Islands on 30 May 2007.  John Ryland, Emeritus Professor of Marine Biology, from the University of Wales Swansea and Dr. Joshua Mackie from Moss Landing Marine Laboratories in California identified the species for me.  This species may have been found since the initial discovery in Plymouth, England by Dr. John Bishop on the hull of a beached ship.  This species is native to the western Atlantic and the Caribbean.
File No. 300507 20-907 
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
This sea slug, Tritonia plebeia, was found gliding along the side of a pontoon in the Queen Elizabeth II marina on the 26 April 2007.  It was collected for photography in an aquarium and then returned to the marina the following day.
File No. 35-901
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
A mysid shrimp collected with a dip net from next to the southern most pontoon close to the south-east corner of the Queen Elizabeth II marina in St. Peter Port harbour on Guernsey's east coast, Channel Islands, Great Britain.
File No. 9-912 
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
eel grass Zostera marina bed BG 210307 23-890 smg
This image shows some of the eel grass, Zostera marina, beds at ELWS (extreme low water spring tide) near Salerie Corner in Belle Greve Bay on Guernsey's east coast.  The disturbed areas are where bait diggers have been digging for razor clams.

Photographed on the 20 February 2007
File No. BG 200207 6616
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
Devonshire cup coral Caryophyllia smithii QEII marina 27-753 190904 smg
This colony of Ectopleura hydroids was photographed in the Queen Elizabeth 2 marina, St. Peter Port harbour, Guernsey on 1 June 2006.  According to Dr. Peter Schuchert from the Muséum d'histoire naturelle in Geneva (who is an authority on these animals) this species is most likely Ectopleura larynx but it could be Ectopleura crocea.  The two species are difficult to tell apart in the field.  E. crocea is the rarer of the two species. These hydroids grow on the darker side of the pontoons close to the mouth of the marina.  Dr. Shuchert tells me that similar species in the genus Tubularia have no collar under the hydranth body. A collar is clearly present in the hydranth in the upper right corner of the image so these animals are in the genus Ectopleura.
File no. 010606 33-853
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
Albert statue 220308 3845 smg
Albert statue 220308 3845 smg
Albert statue 220308 3845 smg
See photo in original gallery.
Keywords: sea night statue boat buildings harbour marina guernsey night time channel islands parked cars water front car parking prince albert statue fountain street st. peter port
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