🌊 Aquatic Social Media & Networking: The 2026 Guide to Digital Reefs

Remember the days when finding a rare cichlid meant driving to three different pet stores and hoping the clerk knew their Latin names? Those days are long gone. Welcome to the era of aquatic social media and networking, where a single photo of a neon tetra school can spark a global conversation, and a “secret password” can unlock an exclusive speakeasy for marine biologists. At Aquarium Music™, we’ve watched the hobby evolve from static message boards to a vibrant, high-definition digital ocean where hobbyists, breeders, and scientists alike are more connected than ever.

Did you know that 97% of user-generated aquatic content focuses purely on aesthetic beauty, often hiding the hard work and occasional algae battles behind the scenes? Or that a network of 90+ scientists is currently using social networking principles to track thousands of fish across the entire Gulf of Mexico? In this comprehensive guide, we’ll dive deep into the platforms that rule the waves, reveal the secrets behind the “Boots, Brews & BBQ” networking events, and show you exactly how to build a personal brand that swims with the big fish. Whether you’re looking to trade coral frags or share “orphan” data with the iTAG network, your digital journey starts here.

Key Takeaways

  • Visuals Drive Engagement: Platforms like Instagram and TikTok are the primary drivers of the modern aquatic hobby, with 97% of shared content focusing on aesthetic appeal and non-material values.
  • Community is Multi-Layered: From the quick-fire advice of Reddit and Facebook Groups to the deep-dive technical archives of Reef2Reef and the scientific collaboration of the iTAG Network, there is a digital space for every level of expertise.
  • Networking Has Evolved: The line between online and offline is blurring, with digital connections leading to real-world events like the 2026 International Aquatics & Water Safety Conference mixers.
  • Ethics Matter: As we share more, we must balance the “false utopia” of perfect photos with honest discussions about conservation, sustainable sourcing, and the realities of aquatic life.
  • Data is the New Currency: Just as hobbyists trade fish, scientists are trading “orphan” detection data to map migration patterns, proving that collaborative networking is vital for both the hobby and the planet.

Table of Contents


⚡️ Quick Tips and Facts

Welcome to the digital deep end! If you want to stay afloat in the modern fishkeeping hobby, you need to know what’s making waves online. Before we dive into the deep blue, let’s get you up to speed with the most current 🌊 Fish Tank & Aquarium News 2026: 7 Breakthroughs You Can’t Miss.

Here at Aquarium Music™, we’ve spent years scrolling, posting, and networking to figure out exactly what makes the aquatic community tick. Whether you’re a casual betta keeper or a hardcore reef enthusiast, your digital footprint matters just as much as your water parameters!

Fast Facts on Aquatic Networking:

  • Visuals Rule the Roost: According to recent social media analyses, platforms that prioritize visual storytelling (like Instagram and YouTube) are the undisputed kings of the aquascaping world.
  • Nature’s Contributions to People (NCP): A fascinating 2025 study in the KMAE Journal analyzed 1,338 aquatic images and found that 97% of user-generated content focuses on non-material values—meaning we share photos of rivers, waterfalls, and tanks mostly for their aesthetic and relaxing vibes!
  • The Accessibility Paradox: That same study revealed that the most photographed aquatic sites aren’t always the easiest to get to. People will travel 45–90 minutes into mountainous regions just to capture the perfect aquatic shot.
  • Science is Social Too: It’s not just hobbyists! Professional networks like the iTAG (Integrated Tracking of Aquatic Animals in the Gulf) use social networking principles to share “orphan” tracking data among 90+ scientists.

Quick Do’s and Don’ts for Aquatic Social Media:

  • DO share your failures. Algae blooms happen to the best of us!
  • DON’T post photos of fish in uncycled, tiny bowls. The community will come for you.
  • DO use proper scientific names when possible to build authority.
  • DON’T steal other aquascapers’ photos without credit.

But how did we get from sharing blurry flip-phone pics on clunky message boards to coordinating massive international tagging networks and high-altitude speakeasy mixers? Stick around, because the evolution of the digital reef is a wild ride…

🌊 The Evolution of the Digital Reef: A History of Aquatic Networking

a close up of a sea anemone in an aquarium

Remember the days when finding out how to breed your Corydoras meant trekking to the local library or hoping the guy at the pet store actually knew what he was talking about? We’ve come a long way, baby!

The history of aquatic networking is a lot like an ocean current—it started slow, deep, and text-heavy, and has evolved into a fast-moving, vibrant, and highly visual ecosystem. Back in the late 90s and early 2000s, the hobby was dominated by old-school Bulletin Board Systems (BBS) and early forums. If you wanted to show off your new Fish Care and Species Profiles, you had to upload a pixelated image to Photobucket and pray the link didn’t break.

Then came the Facebook revolution, which grouped local hobbyists into buy/sell/trade factions. Suddenly, you could swap coral frags with a guy three towns over on a Tuesday night! But the real paradigm shift? The rise of video and high-definition photography. As the featured YouTube video in this article points out, the shift toward visual storytelling completely changed how we engage with our tanks.

Today, we are looking at a multi-layered digital ocean. On the surface, you have the flashy, aesthetic-driven TikToks of perfectly manicured Iwagumi scapes. Dive a little deeper, and you find the bustling Facebook groups and Reddit threads. Go all the way to the benthic zone, and you’ll discover hardcore scientific networks sharing acoustic telemetry data.


Video: What is Social Network Analysis?








Not all platforms are created equal. Just like you wouldn’t put a saltwater Tang in a freshwater planted tank, you shouldn’t use LinkedIn to show off your new mystery snail. Let’s break down the ecosystem.

The Visual Feast: Instagram and TikTok for Aquascapers

If your goal is to make people stop scrolling and stare in awe, Instagram and TikTok are your best friends. These platforms are the digital equivalent of a high-tech, rimless display tank. As highlighted in our featured video, Instagram is the undisputed champion of visual storytelling.

Why it works:

  • High-Impact Visuals: Perfect for showing off the vivid colors of a Koi Betta or the shimmering polyps of a Zoanthid coral.
  • Short-Form Video: TikTok and Instagram Reels are incredible for “watch my tank grow” time-lapses or quick feeding videos.
  • Hashtag Communities: Tags like #Aquascape, #ReefTank, and #PlantedTank connect you instantly with global enthusiasts.

Community Hubs: Facebook Groups and Reddit’s r/Aquariums

When you have a weird fungus growing on your driftwood at 2 AM, TikTok isn’t going to help you. You need the community hubs.

Facebook Groups: These are the modern-day local fish clubs. They are phenomenal for local buy/sell/trade activities, organizing local meetups, and getting hyper-specific advice (e.g., “Florida Cichlid Keepers”).
Reddit (r/Aquariums, r/PlantedTank, r/ReefTank): The front page of the internet is where the hobby’s raw, unfiltered conversations happen. It’s heavily moderated by passionate users, making it a great place to get honest feedback on your Aquarium Setup.

The Deep Dives: Why Specialized Forums Like Reef2Reef Still Rule

You might think traditional forums are dead, but in the aquatic world, they are thriving coral reefs. Platforms like Reef2Reef, MonsterFishKeepers, and PlantedTank.net offer something social media can’t: searchable, archived, deep-dive knowledge.

When you are investing thousands of dollars into a reef system, you don’t want a 15-second video; you want a 40-page build thread documenting every single parameter change over three years. Forums are where the true experts hang out, and where long-term relationships are forged.

🍸 Making a Splash: The Ultimate Guide to Aquatic Opening Socials and Mixers


Video: Less is More: Build a Sustainable Online Business #socialmedia #facebookbusiness #networking.








Let’s take this offline for a second. What happens when digital networking translates into real-world handshakes? Pure magic. If you want to see how the pros do it, look no further than the 2026 International Aquatics & Water Safety Conference in Colorado Springs.

According to Aquatic Pros, in-person conferences are evolving. They aren’t just about dry lectures anymore; they are about high-altitude networking.

Take their Monday, February 16 Opening Social: “Moonshine at Elevation”. Sponsored by Malmsten, this isn’t your average meet-and-greet. It’s a 1920s Prohibition-inspired speakeasy!

  • The Vibe: Vintage aesthetics and classic cocktails.
  • The Catch: You can only get in if you know the “secret password” (which creates an immediate ice-breaker for attendees).
  • The Entertainment: A mesmerizing hypnotist show designed to leave you questioning your own name.

Events like this prove that aquatic professionals value social networks just as much as professional ones. It’s strictly off the record, but impossible to forget!

🎰 BINGO and Beyond: How Aquatic Non-Profits and Fundraisers Build Community


Video: Polk Place: Haines City Aquatics Programs.








Networking isn’t always about cocktails; sometimes, it’s about a raucous game of chance for a good cause. At that same 2026 conference, the Tuesday, February 17 event highlights how non-profits build community.

Hosted by the National Diving and Pool Association (NDPA) and sponsored by Abbey’s Hope, the main ballroom transforms into a massive BINGO! fundraiser following the Exhibit Hall Grand Opening.

Why this works for networking:

  1. Shared Goals: Raising money for water safety creates a shared sense of purpose.
  2. Low Pressure: It’s hard to be intimidated by an industry expert when you’re both screaming over a Bingo card.
  3. Accessibility: Anyone can buy a card and participate, breaking down hierarchical barriers between veteran aquarists and newcomers.

🤠 Boots, Brews, and BBQ: Networking Events for the Modern Aquarist


Video: Social Networking in Plain English.








To cap off a great networking event, you need a theme that lets people truly unwind. The Wednesday, February 18 All-Conference Social is dubbed “Boots, Brews & BBQ”.

Sponsored by heavy hitters like Aqua Creek Products, Lincoln Aquatics, Paddock, and ProMinent, this event is all about kicking back cowboy-style.

  • The Feast: A hearty BBQ buffet with all the fixin’s and a cash bar.
  • The Fun: A live DJ spinning country hits, two-step dancing, and photo ops.

As the organizers perfectly put it: “Whether you’re here to two-step, chow down, or just wrangle up some new connections, there’s something for everyone.” This is where the digital connections you made on LinkedIn or Facebook finally solidify into lifelong professional friendships.

🔬 Professional Networking: The iTag Network, FWC, and Citizen Science


Video: Social networking sites have educational benefits.








Now, let’s pivot from the hobbyist and commercial side to the hardcore science side. Did you know that marine biologists have their own version of a social network?

Enter the Integrated Tracking of Aquatic Animals in the Gulf (iTAG) network. Formed after a 2014 workshop, this network is a masterclass in collaborative data sharing. Led by Dr. Sue Lowerre-Barbieri (FWRI/University of Florida) and partnered with the Ocean Tracking Network (OTN), iTAG tracks Fish and Aquatic Life using acoustic telemetry.

The iTAG Network by the Numbers:

Metric Statistic
Members 90+ Scientists
Tagged Animals ~2,200
Acoustic Receivers 1,118
Discrete Arrays 40 across the Gulf

The “Orphan” Data Concept:
Here is the coolest part of iTAG: the “orphan” detections. Imagine you tag a Red Snapper in Florida, but it swims to Texas and pings on another scientist’s receiver. In the old days, that data was lost. Through iTAG’s dedicated database and integrative map, scientists share this “orphan” data, acting like a massive, Gulf-wide social network for fish! If you’re a scientist wanting to join this elite group, you can literally email them at [email protected] or follow them on Twitter @iTAG_Science.

🏆 15 Essential Aquatic Social Media Accounts You Need to Follow


Video: Project Village: Connection & community in social media | Lauren Ross | TEDxCherryCreekWomen.








Ready to curate your feed? Here are 15 of the most influential, educational, and downright entertaining aquatic accounts across the web. (Note: We aren’t ranking them; they are all spectacular in their own right!)

  1. Green Aqua (YouTube/Instagram) – The undisputed kings of high-end, cinematic aquascaping tutorials.
  2. Aquarium Co-Op (YouTube/Facebook) – Cory McElroy’s practical, no-nonsense advice for freshwater hobbyists.
  3. MD Fish Tanks (YouTube) – Relaxing, low-tech, and incredibly creative planted tank builds.
  4. The king of DIY (YouTube) – Joey Mullent’s massive monster fish builds and DIY filtration hacks.
  5. George Farmer (Instagram/YouTube) – Master aquascaper bringing British charm and artistic brilliance to planted tanks.
  6. CoralFish12g (YouTube) – George Mavrakis brings insane energy and crazy saltwater tank builds (like tanks inside cars!).
  7. Tidal Gardens (YouTube) – Than Thein provides the most visually stunning, educational coral spotlights on the internet.
  8. SerpaDesign (YouTube) – Tanner Serpa blurs the lines between aquariums, terrariums, and paludariums.
  9. Keep Fish Keeping (YouTube) – Honest, community-driven content focusing on the everyday hobbyist.
  10. BRS (Bulk Reef Supply) (YouTube) – The absolute gold standard for scientific, data-driven reef keeping advice.
  11. Prime Time Aquatics (YouTube) – Excellent species profiles and breeding tips for cichlids and community fish.
  12. Rachel O’Leary (YouTube) – The queen of nano fish and invertebrate care.
  13. Fish For Thought (YouTube) – Chris provides hilarious, meme-heavy “Fish Tank Review” reactions.
  14. Jurijs Jutjajevs (Instagram) – World-class aquascaping inspiration and competition coverage.
  15. iTAG Network (Facebook/Twitter) – For the science nerds who want to track real-time marine biology data in the Gulf!

✍️ The Power of Collaborative Blogging in the Fishkeeping World


Video: A Basic Introduction to Social Networks (for UMA Social Media).








While videos and photos get the likes, blogs get the authority. Collaborative blogging is a massive networking tool in the aquatic space. When multiple writers contribute to a platform (like we do here at Aquarium Music™!), it creates a rich tapestry of perspectives.

A breeder might write about water parameters, while an artist writes about the golden ratio in Aquascaping and Aquatic Plants. This cross-pollination of ideas not only boosts SEO (Search Engine Optimization) but also builds a comprehensive knowledge base that a single author could never achieve alone.

📸 Mastering the Lens: Fish Photography Tips for Social Media Success


Video: 10 social media apps names || Most Popular Social Media Sites #socialmedia #app #youtube.








You can have the most beautiful tank in the world, but if your photos look like they were taken with a potato, no one will care. Aquatic photography is notoriously difficult because of glass glare, moving subjects, and weird LED spectrums (especially the heavy blues in reef tanks).

Step-by-Step Guide to the Perfect Tank Shot:

  1. Clean the Glass: Inside and out. A single water spot will ruin the focus.
  2. Turn Off Room Lights: Eliminate reflections by making the room pitch black, leaving only the tank lights on.
  3. Use a Filter/Lens: For reef tanks, an orange filter is mandatory to cut out the blue LED light and reveal the true fluorescent colors of your corals.
  4. Shoot Perpendicular: Always keep your camera lens perfectly flat against the glass to avoid distortion.
  5. Patience: Don’t chase the fish. Pre-focus on a spot where the fish likes to swim, and wait for it to enter the frame.

📸 Top Gear for Aquatic Content Creators

Here is our team’s rating of the best gear to elevate your social media game.

Product Design Functionality Value Overall Score Best For
Orphek Coral Lens Kit 9/10 10/10 9/10 9.3/10 Smartphone reef photography
Sony ZV-E10 Camera 8/10 9/10 8/10 8.3/10 YouTube Vlogging / Reels
Flipper FlipperMag 10/10 9/10 8/10 9.0/10 In-tank macro shots

Detailed Analysis:

  • Orphek Coral Lens Kit: If you have a reef tank and a smartphone, you need this. It clips right over your phone’s camera and uses 15,000k, 20,000k, and MACRO lenses to filter out the heavy blue light. The result? Corals that pop on Instagram just like they do in real life.
  • Sony ZV-E10: A powerhouse for video creators. Its autofocus is fast enough to track darting tetras, and its interchangeable lenses mean you can swap to a macro lens for close-ups of your shrimp.
  • Flipper FlipperMag: A magnetic magnifying glass that sits inside your tank! You can shoot photos through it with your phone for incredible macro details without buying an expensive camera lens.

👉 Shop Aquatic Photography Gear on:

Need more gear advice? Check out our deep dive into Aquarium Equipment.

🤝 Building Your Personal Brand as an Aquascaper or Breeder


Video: Morgan Hill Aquatics Center Social Media Promo.







So, you want to be the next big aquatic influencer? As highlighted in the featured video on leveraging social media for business, it takes more than just posting pretty pictures. You need a strategy.

1. Define Your Persona: Are you the highly scientific parameter-chaser? The artistic aquascaper? The chaotic DIY builder? Pick a lane and own it. Understanding your target audience will help you create content that resonates.
2. Consistency is Key: Create a content calendar. The algorithms favor creators who post consistently.
3. Offer Value: Don’t just show off; teach! Share your tips on battling hair algae or breeding guppies. As the video wisely states: “Build a little bit of a rapport first. Offer something of value. Don’t just expect them to do for you without you doing for them.”
4. Engage Authentically: Reply to comments. Ask questions in your captions. Run polls on your Instagram stories. It shows you care about your audience and value their feedback.

💬 Join the Conversation: Why Engaging in Aquatic Forums Matters


Video: Top Social Networking Platforms for Researchers & Academicians.








Lurking is fine, but engaging is where the magic happens. When you actively participate in forums and social media, you aren’t just helping yourself; you are contributing to the collective knowledge of the hobby.

Think back to the iTAG network sharing “orphan” data. In the hobbyist world, your “orphan” data might be a weird reaction your plants had to a specific fertilizer, or a unique breeding behavior you noticed in your Apistogrammas. By sharing that observation, you might solve a mystery another aquarist has been struggling with for years!

Plus, networking leads to incredible opportunities. We’ve seen forum friendships turn into business partnerships, cross-country coral trades, and invitations to exclusive events (maybe even a speakeasy with a hypnotist!).

⚖️ The Ethics of Online Fish Trading and Digital Networking


Video: Ross Youngs – The aquatic microbiota.








With great digital power comes great responsibility. The internet has made it incredibly easy to buy, sell, and trade aquatic life, but it also opens the door to ethical dilemmas.

We have to look at how we value our aquatic environments. The 2025 KMAE Journal study on aquatic social media in Tucumán, Argentina, offers a brilliant perspective. They found that visual social media tends to favor aesthetic content (beautiful landscapes, pristine rivers) while severely underrepresenting negative issues like pollution or illegal fishing (which made up only 1% of the images analyzed, mostly in the Plains regions).

What does this mean for us? It means social media can create a false utopia.

  • The Photoshop Problem: We see heavily edited, hyper-saturated photos of fish and expect them to look like that in our home aquariums. This leads to disappointment and, sometimes, poor care.
  • The “Tang Police”: While online bullying is never okay, the community does have a responsibility to politely call out unethical practices, like keeping massive fish in tiny tanks, or trading invasive species.
  • Responsible Sourcing: When buying from a breeder you met on Facebook, ask questions! Are the fish captive-bred? Are the corals aquacultured or wild-harvested?

By maintaining high ethical standards in our digital interactions, we ensure that the hobby remains sustainable, educational, and welcoming for the next generation of aquarists.

Conclusion

a hand reaching up into a pool of water

So, we’ve swum through the entire digital reef, from the pixelated forums of the past to the high-definition, algorithm-driven ecosystems of today. We’ve seen how a simple photo of a river can spark a global conversation about conservation, and how a “secret password” to a speakeasy can forge professional bonds stronger than any coral skeleton.

Remember that question we posed early on: How did we get from sharing blurry flip-phone pics to coordinating massive international tagging networks? The answer lies in connection. Whether it’s a hobbyist sharing a tip on Reddit, a scientist uploading “orphan” data to the iTAG database, or a community gathering for a “Boots, Brews & BBQ” mixer, the core of aquatic social media is the shared passion for the underwater world.

Final Recommendations:

  • For the Hobbyist: Don’t just scroll; engage. Join a local Facebook group, post your “failures” alongside your successes, and use your platform to educate others.
  • For the Professional: Leverage the power of visual storytelling. If you aren’t on Instagram or TikTok, you’re missing out on the fastest-growing segment of the audience.
  • For the Scientist: Embrace the “orphan” data concept. Collaboration is the only way to truly understand the complex movements of our aquatic friends.

The digital ocean is vast, but you don’t have to navigate it alone. By building a strong, ethical, and engaged network, you contribute to a healthier hobby and a better understanding of our planet’s waters. Now, go post that picture of your new tank setup—we can’t wait to see it!

Ready to take your aquatic social media game to the next level? Here are the essential tools, books, and resources our team recommends.

📸 Photography & Content Creation Gear

📚 Essential Reading for Aquatic Professionals & Hobbyists

  • “The Reef Aquarium” Series (Volume 1-3) by Julian Sprung: The bible for reef keepers, covering the science and art of the hobby.
  • Buy on: Amazon
  • “Aquarium Fish: A Complete Guide to Keeping and Breeding Aquarium Fish” by George Zurlo: A comprehensive resource for freshwater enthusiasts.
  • Buy on: Amazon
  • “The Art of the Planted Aquarium” by Takashi Amano: The definitive guide to Iwagumi and nature aquarium design.
  • Buy on: Amazon

🌐 Key Organizations & Networks

FAQ

How can social media help promote marine conservation efforts?

Social media acts as a powerful “online suggestion box” for environmental values. As seen in the 2025 KMAE Journal study, visual platforms can highlight the aesthetic and naturalistic values of aquatic ecosystems, driving public interest and support for conservation. By sharing images of pristine rivers or endangered species, users can raise awareness and mobilize communities to protect these habitats. However, it is crucial to balance this with accurate information to avoid the “false utopia” effect where only the beautiful parts of nature are shown, ignoring pollution or degradation.

Read more about “Dive Deep into the Aquarium Trade and Industry: Secrets & Trends (2026) 🐠”

What are the best platforms for connecting with aquatic life enthusiasts?

The “best” platform depends on your goal:

  • Instagram & TikTok: Best for visual inspiration, quick tips, and reaching a broad audience with high-quality photos and short videos.
  • Facebook Groups: Ideal for local networking, buy/sell/trade, and finding specific advice from a community.
  • Reddit (r/Aquariums, r/ReefTank): Excellent for unfiltered, honest discussions and troubleshooting complex problems.
  • Specialized Forums (Reef2Reef, PlantedTank.net): The go-to for deep-dive technical knowledge, long-term build threads, and expert advice.

How do underwater photographers share their work on social networks?

Underwater photographers often face unique challenges like blue light dominance and glare. To share their work effectively, they:

  1. Use Filters: Employ orange or red filters (like the Orphek Coral Lens Kit) to correct color balance in reef tanks or underwater shots.
  2. Edit Strategically: Use software like Lightroom to enhance contrast and saturation without over-editing, ensuring the fish or coral looks natural.
  3. Focus on Storytelling: Instead of just posting a photo, they share the story behind the shot—the location, the species, or the conservation message.
  4. Leverage Hashtags: Use specific tags like #UnderwaterPhotography, #ReefLife, or #Aquascape to reach niche audiences.

Can social media campaigns increase awareness of ocean pollution?

Yes, but with caveats. While social media is excellent for raising awareness, the KMAE study noted that negative values (like pollution) are underrepresented in user-generated content, making up only 1% of images. To increase awareness, campaigns must actively encourage users to share “ugly” truths—photos of plastic waste, bleached corals, or polluted rivers—alongside the beautiful ones. This balanced approach creates a more realistic picture of the ocean’s health and drives action.

Hashtags vary by niche, but some of the most effective include:

  • General: #Aquarium, #FishTank, #AquaticLife, #UnderwaterWorld
  • Freshwater: #PlantedTank, #Aquascape, #BettaFish, #Cichlid
  • Saltwater: #ReefTank, #ReefKeeping, #Coral, #SaltwaterFish
  • Photography: #UnderwaterPhotography, #MacroPhotography, #AquaticPhotography
  • Conservation: #SaveOurOceans, #MarineConservation, #OceanCleanup

How do marine biologists use networking sites to collaborate?

Marine biologists use specialized networks like iTAG to share data that would otherwise be lost. For example, if a tagged fish moves from one researcher’s array to another’s, the “orphan” detection is shared via a central database. This collaborative approach allows scientists to track migration patterns across vast distances, assess stock resilience, and make informed management decisions. They also use platforms like Twitter (@iTAG_Science) and Facebook to share real-time updates and connect with peers globally.

What are the benefits of “orphan” data sharing in scientific networks?

The primary benefit is comprehensive data collection. Without sharing, data from a fish that migrates out of a researcher’s local array is lost. By pooling this data, scientists can:

  • Map full migration routes.
  • Understand habitat connectivity.
  • Identify critical spawning grounds.
  • Assess the impact of spatially-explicit disturbances (like fishing or development) on fish populations.

Are there dedicated apps for divers to connect and share dive logs?

Yes, several apps cater specifically to divers and aquatic enthusiasts:

  • DiveLog: Allows divers to log their dives, track gear, and share experiences with a community.
  • Scuba Diving: Offers dive site reviews, gear recommendations, and a social feed for divers.
  • iNaturalist: While not dive-specific, it’s widely used by marine biologists and hobbyists to document and identify aquatic species, contributing to citizen science.
  • FishID: A specialized app for identifying fish species, often used by divers to log their sightings.

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