On my last trip to Cozumel, besides nurse
sharks and turtles, I didn’t see big critters. But
I saw an eye-popping painted elysia sea slug
looking as fine as the one pictured in Paul
Humann’s Reef Creatures.
When I was a new diver, I was out for the
big stuff. But after seeing hundreds of barracuda
and lobsters, I appreciated more diverse
pleasures in the reef environment.
That’s where my magnifying glass comes in.
The tiny shrimp lurking in the lettuce coral,
the clinging crab in the anemone, and the
pipefish in the sand flats are easier to ID and
a lot more spectacular with a good glass. I also
get a lot more detail on other denizens, including
the corals.
If you want to go small, you need a glass
lens, not plastic. That’s because the index of
refraction of water is about 1.33. Plastic lenses
have about the same index as water, so they
become useless underwater.
Optical glass has an index
of about 1.52, so it works,
though the magnification
underwater will be a bit less
than above.
Index of refraction?
That’s a measure of how much a substance
slows the speed of light, and thus bends
(refracts) it. Water’s index of 1.33 also explains
why objects appear 1/3 larger underwater, and
why your buddy swears that a 3-foot grouper
was a 4-footer.
Magnifying lenses in your mask (bifocals)
are not very useful for viewing underwater
subjects except gauges. This goes for the plastic
stick-on bifocals as well as the Mares ESA mask,
which has separate lens frames in which you
can put magnifiers.
Instead, you need a good hand-held glass.
I’ve tried several and my favorite is Edmund
Scientific (www.scientificsonline.com). Look
for the Round Magnifier With 10X Spot Lens.
The 4-inch lens (you don’t want a small one
that you need to hold too close to the subject)
is available there for $11.95, plus $6.40 for
shipping. It fits in a BC pocket and has a hole
in the handle for a lanyard. Happy hunting.
– M.A.