Being surrounded by a shimmering spiral of silver—that"s what it feels like to encounter a school of blackfin barracuda at Shark Reef in Ras Mohammed National Park, Egypt. These streamlined fish, marked by sharp V-shaped stripes, move in near-perfect unison. Their slow, deliberate spirals aren"t random—they"re an evolutionary strategy that offers both safety in numbers and an edge in hunting. Blackfin barracudas are found throughout tropical waters, from the Red Sea to the central Pacific. During the day, they gather in tight, coordinated groups near the reef, scattering at dusk to pursue prey.
Barracudas at Shark Reef, Ras Mohammed National Park, Sinai Peninsula, Egypt
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
National Moth Week
-
Ski touring in Austria
-
Valley of Fire State Park, Nevada
-
Dancing waters of Dubai
-
We did not invent this, honest
-
Goðafoss waterfall, Iceland
-
A spectacle unlike any other
-
‘Fringe’ takes center stage as Edinburgh celebrates the arts
-
There once was a lighthouse from...
-
Vietnam’s new bridge deserves a big hand
-
Bellissima!
-
Eastern grey kangaroos in Australia’s Kosciuszko National Park
-
Sanday Island and the North Sea, Scotland
-
Defying gravity on a swing ride
-
Spotted eagle rays in the Galápagos Islands
-
The buzz about bees
-
Thick-billed raven, Simien Mountains, Ethiopia
-
Stari Most in Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina
-
Isla del Pescado on the Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia
-
Fiddlehead fern fronds
-
Red-leaf hunting in Japan
-
San Francisco Bay salt flats
-
Tortula moss, Netherlands
-
Craters of the Moon centennial
-
Satellite image of sand and seaweed in the Bahamas
-
Celebrating Norwegian Constitution Day
-
The mountain of 30,000 sakura
-
Paris is photo-ready this week
-
Celebrating World Art Day
-
Notre-Dame Cathedral reopens
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

