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DEEP SEA BC S1 Ep1 | DEEP WATER CRUSTACEANS | BROWN BOX CRABS | SHRIMP | PRAWNS | STUBBY SUID 

Captain Quinn
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In this episode of Deep Sea BC, Captain Quinn explores the deep depths of the Strait of Georgia in the Salish Sea in search of mysterious deep water crustaceans. Can he find and document the Brown Box crab, Pacific Spot Prawn and or the Pandalus Borealis Shrimp in their natural deep water habitats? What else might he discover as he combs the ocean floor with his submersible remote operated vehicle? The deep sea is home to many wild, bizarre and mysterious creatures. Can he find some of them? Maybe he will find a rare and unique animal, a sea monster or perhaps a mermaid? In addition to holding many mysteries the sea is also a place of bounty with food available almost everywhere you look.
When they hatch, all crustaceans float around in the ocean currents as microscopic Zooplankton, filling the waters with life. After a while, they finally settle on the ocean floor and begin to grow. Shore crabs were probably one of the first marine animals I came to discover, they are under almost every rock in the intertidal zone up and down the BC coast. They are common and widely recognized like other common shoreline species such as the starfish. They spend part of their day on land as the time goes out and part of their day underwater as the tide comes in. There are many different species of crabs in the Salish sea. Some like the shore crab live part of their lives on land and others like the red rock crab and Dungeness crab spend their time scavenging in subtidal areas. Crabs, like shrimp, are crustaceans. Instead of bones they have a hard exoskeleton which must be moulted inorder for the animal to grow. Some crustaceans like shore crabs, dungeness and red rock crab commonly encountered by humans and live in places that are easily accessible by humans with masks and snorkels but what about the crustaceans that live deeper? Much deeper. Beyond the natural reach of humans such as spot prawns, pandalus borealis shrimp and the rarely observed robust brown box crab. As is the case with most marine life, the deeper they live the less we encounter and interact with them, the less we seem to know about them.
And so we are grabbing our traps, our masks and snorkels and our remote operated vehicle and we are setting out to explore the marine environments that the crustaceans of the Salish Sea call home.
Captain Quinn is here to bring you Fishing Comedy & The Great Outdoors!
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23 янв 2023

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Комментарии : 15   
@steverodall5873
@steverodall5873 Год назад
Great film. Coastal BC is such an amazing place.
@jonahv9572
@jonahv9572 Год назад
Very interesting! Looking forward to the next one!
@ivanchu1164
@ivanchu1164 7 месяцев назад
Wow! I'm a long time Vancouver area salt water fishing guide and as I get older, I have an absolutely new profound appreciation of what is below the surface and pass along as much information to my grandchildren and fishing guests. Thank you Capt!
@SledorFish
@SledorFish Год назад
Excited to see this film series on RU-vid!
@fishwhistle9666
@fishwhistle9666 Год назад
This is an awesome video. Thanks so much cap! Look forward to more! Cheers.
@martindvorak6467
@martindvorak6467 Год назад
Well done Captain!
@TheCaptainQuinn
@TheCaptainQuinn Год назад
Thanks :)
@BrettCarpenter1
@BrettCarpenter1 Год назад
Great film!! I always look forward to your films. I can't wait to see what you put out next.
@viroux
@viroux Год назад
enjoying every video on your channel... keep going... thank you...
@TheCaptainQuinn
@TheCaptainQuinn Год назад
Thank you!
@Ianstephenzs
@Ianstephenzs Год назад
This is a really amazing series. The storytelling is captivating. The cinematography really shows that it is like down in the deep. I can't wait to see the rest of the series. I am an avid technical driver that regularly dives to 200 ft in the same waters off Vancouver Island because of that I get to experience these same ecosystems. It's awesome to see other people have the same passion for a place few get to see but are so vital to our local seas.
@TheCaptainQuinn
@TheCaptainQuinn Год назад
Thanks for watching! It would have been great to connect with you while making this series! If we do a season 2 ill be reaching out :)
@strydershadow391
@strydershadow391 Год назад
Great stuff. You're doing what I've always dreamed of doing. I'm from Oregon and also have always had a great love of the oceans. It's cool that today's technology allows us to finally see such an unexplored world on our own planet.
@genedavis759
@genedavis759 Год назад
It's my understanding that the population explosion of Sea Otters in the 70's were the biggest impact on Abalony populations on the West coast. Yes there was commercial harvest as well however the daily consumption by the otters was huge in comparison. In central California I could not go to the beach without seeing otters swimming about in the Bull kelp that lined our coastline at that time. Bye the way I haven't heard an explination as to what wiped out the Bull kelp.
@timmyd5144
@timmyd5144 Год назад
I saw a video about the great bear rain forest, in it the documentary explained that when the sea otters got hunted out the sea urchin population went out of control and that had an effect on the kelp. Kinda like when they’ve removed wolves in areas the deer/elk species end up doing damage to the trees.
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