Requested Pictures
Here are the pictures found that you requested.
Bullock's Hypselodoris (Nov 2, 2014)
Bullock's Hypselodoris (Nov 2, 2014)
Elisabeth's Chromodoris (Oct 26, 2014)
Elisabeth's Chromodoris (Oct 26, 2014)
Chamberlin's Nembrotha (Oct 28, 2014)
Img 3500 (Oct 29, 2014)
Pygmy Seahorse (Oct 29, 2014)
Notice how tiny this sea horse is, maybe 1/2" in size.
Anemone (Sep 2, 2019)
Notice some of the very tiny critters inside the anemone
IMG 2707 (Sep 2, 2019)
Octopus (Sep 2, 2019)
Curled up tightly inside a crevice
IMG 2689 (Sep 2, 2019)
Rockfish (Sep 2, 2019)
Super close with a macro, the eye is just on the far left
Hopkins Rose (Feb 21, 2021)
Hopkins Rose (Feb 21, 2021)
2Y1A3428 (Feb 21, 2021)
2Y1A3432 (Feb 21, 2021)
2Y1A0741 (Jul 26, 2020)
This guy was maybe a half inch long.
Spanish Shawl (Jul 26, 2020)
The Spanish Shawl is maybe an inch long
2Y1A2686 (Dec 20, 2020)
Hopkins Rose (Feb 21, 2021)
IMG 2126 (Apr 13, 2014)
IMG 2147 (Apr 13, 2014)
San Diego Dorid (Mar 2, 2013)
Spanish Shawl (Mar 2, 2013)
Sea Lemon (Mar 2, 2013)
Blenny (Sep 13, 2018)
This tiny goby lives in the hole in the coral
Caribbean Neon Goby on Brain Coral (Sep 13, 2018)
California Poppy (Apr 9, 2022)
2Y1A7001 (Apr 9, 2022)
Bee (Apr 9, 2022)
Bee in flight (Apr 9, 2022)
Snoutnose Pufferfish (Jun 30, 2022)
All over the place, but also small, maybe 2 inches
Caribbean Neon Goby (Jul 1, 2022)
Very small, maybe 1 inch
Fairy Basslet (Jul 1, 2022)
Very abundant, but also very small
Pederson Cleaner Shrimp (Jul 1, 2022)
Likes the corkscrew anemone right below. This is very small, maybe 1-2 inches
Juvenile Bluehead Wrasse (Jul 1, 2022)
The next picture shows what they become
Bluehead Wrasse (Jul 1, 2022)
An adult bluehead wrasse
Juvenile Yellowtail Damselfish (Jul 1, 2022)
They lose most of their spots as the get older, their tail turns yellow, and the body not as dark blue.
Blue Chromis (Feb 2, 2023)
These are very small, mostly just a couple of inches long.
Jawfish (Feb 3, 2023)
They normally are very shy and hang out in a hole in the sand, this one was very brave to be out several inches form its hole. It takes patience to photograph these.
Stingray Eye (Feb 3, 2023)
A very close up of the eye on a southern stingray at Barracuda Shoals
Token Clown Fish (Apr 28, 2023)
They were all over, so might as well have a token picture of one
Ornate Ghost Pipefish (Apr 28, 2023)
Hard to find
Ribbon Eel (Apr 30, 2023)
Juvenile. The body turns blue as an adult, the yellow ribbon remains
Painted Frogfish (Apr 30, 2023)
This was about 3 inches long, but the diopter helps to make it look bigger.
Painted Frogfish (Apr 30, 2023)
Juvenile. This was about 1/2 inch, taken from no more than 2 inches from it with a diopter.
Nudibranch (Apr 30, 2023)
Philippines is home to very large number of nudibranchs,
Fingered Dragonet (Apr 30, 2023)
Brown Mantis Shrimp (Apr 30, 2023)
Dragon Nudibranch (Apr 30, 2023)
Skeleton Shrimp (May 2, 2023)
Super small, maybe the size of fishing line
Orange-margined Amina Nudibranch (May 2, 2023)
Emperor Shrimp (I think) (May 2, 2023)
Two Frogfish (Painted and Warty) (Oct 5, 2023)
The second one is to the left of the orange one. These are both not much bigger than about 3 inches.
Razor Fish (Oct 6, 2023)
These silly fish like to swim facing the bottom of the
Dark Margin Doriprimatica (Oct 8, 2023)
I'm not an expert on nudibranchs, but this seems to be the closest I can ID
Ornate Ghost Pipefish (Oct 8, 2023)
Juvenile Robe Hem Hypselodoris (Oct 8, 2023)
The name is the closest match I could find. I have not seen a collection of same type nudibranch on the same rock before
Butterfly Nudibranch (Oct 8, 2023)
Or so the dive guide said