Becca Saunders Gallery
Choose from 436 pictures in our Becca Saunders collection for your Wall Art or Photo Gift. All professionally made for Quick Shipping.
Australian Rock Art
Tokay Gecko
Frank Lane Picture Agency
Universal Images Group
Biosphoto Print Collection
Mother's Day
Photographer Galleries
> Tim Acker
> Oriol Alamany
> Ardea
> Barry Ashenhurst
> Ian Beattie Photography
> Giovanni Bellani
> Roger Brown
> Densey Clyne
> Kevin Deacon
> John Fairhall
> Jean-Paul Ferrero
> Brett Gregory
> Dennis Harding
> Greg Harold
> Dallas and John Heaton
> Klein and Hubert
> Attila Bicskos Kaszo
> Jean-Michel Labat
> Jan-Peter Lahall
> Jean-Marc La Roque
> Wayne Lawler
> Michael Maconachie
> Mary Ann McDonald
> Joe Mcdonald
> Rob McLean
> Hiroya Minakuchi
> Reg Morrison
> Nature Production Collection
> Jaime Plaza van Roon
> Fritz Polking (1936-2007)
> Marianne Porteners
> Nick Rains Photography
> Becca Saunders
> John Shaw
> Mark Spencer
> Michael Van Ewijk
> Dave Watts Nature Photography
> Terry Whittaker
> Daniel Zupanc
Aerials
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Flowers and Fungi
Food
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Nature by Design
Objects
Panoramic images
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Places
Poster art
Sea and Shore
Trees
Underwater World
Vintage and historical
Weather
The Best of Australia Book
Images Dated

SND02105
Hermit crab
Dardanus sp.
Hermit crabs are shell-less creatures that use dead shells for protection. As hermit crabs grow, they must exchange their shell for a bigger one. Suitable empty shells are not always available and hermit crabs frequently fight over an attractive shell. Scientists have even see hermit crabs size up each others shells and then make a swap, but this is rare.
New South Wales, Australia
© Becca Saunders/AUSCAPE All rights reserved

SND02102
Old wife
Enoplosus armatus
Old Wives are a family of fish containing a single species. It is unique to Australia. Old Wives can occur in pairs, as large solitary individuals on coastal reefs, and in large schools usually in sheltered habitats such as seagrass beds or beside jetty pylons. The dorsal spines are venemous. The common name is derived from the grating sound the fish makes when stressed (ex. when being removed from a fish hook).
New South Wales, Australia
© Becca Saunders/AUSCAPE All rights reserved

SND02082
Halimeda green algae
Halimeda cuneata
A large amount of almost white sand is associated with coral reefs. Some of it consists of the ground-up remains of corals and shells, but much of the sand is produced directly by various algae on the reef. One of the most ubiquitous of these sand-producing plants is the green leafy alga, Halimeda, which deposits granular calcium carbonate in its tissues. When the plant dies (the dead areas appear white), the decayed grains fall free as instant sand. Although there are many tropical species of Halimeda, this is the only species known to reach the southern Australian coast.
Pig Island, Illawarra region, New South Wales, Australia
© Becca Saunders/AUSCAPE All rights reserved