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Watch: What’s lurking beneath the surface? Here’s what the ‘fish cam’ off Deerfield Beach reveals

David Schutz, assistant managing editor at the South Florida Sun Sentinel.
UPDATED:
Scenes from the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.
Scenes from the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.

What a joy, bobbing gently in the waves off one of Florida’s spectacular beaches.

But how much do you let your mind wander to what’s lurking just beneath your toes?

Maybe you don’t want to know — out of sight, out of mind.

Or maybe your curiosity gets the better of you. If so, there’s a tiny underwater camera in the shallow waters beneath the Deerfield Beach pier that’s keeping an eye on things down there.

The underwater “Fish Cam” streams continuously day and night on the city’s YouTube page. You can watch it below, but be sure to scroll down for selected highlights, including a very mysterious sighting that we had to ask the city to explain.

Warning: Watching this video may be addicting. And it’s not just a camera, it’s also a microphone. So be sure to pop in your headphones and unmute the soothing sounds. 

The camera is small enough to fit in the palm of your hand and is housed inside a clear globe under the pier. It’s capable of looking around and is controlled remotely from Deerfield Beach City Hall.

“It’s a labor of love,” said Rebecca Medina Stewart, the city’s director of public affairs, whose department runs the cam. “It’s a hard project to maintain. We weren’t sure how it was going to go … and it’s been a lot of trial and error to see what works down there. It’s a really high surf area and so the camera gets beat up really badly. But we do it because people love it.”

They love it so much, Medina Stewart said, that the camera has groupies who watch regularly, report problems and even name some of the regular visiting sea creatures. One of the fan favorites is King Benny the blenny.

“What the public loves about the underwater camera is that the ocean in itself is a completely different world,” Medina Stewart said. “There are some people who love that world, and they’ll dive and fish and get down there under the water all the time. But then there are others who are very much afraid of the ocean but they love to see what’s down there every bit as much as divers do.”

And Medina Stewart and her team — including the cam’s operator, Janeane Pennoyer — know how addictive it is. “Some people watch for a few minutes a day. And we have some people who watch for hours,” Medina Stewart said.

Indeed, spotting something special takes patience. So we’ve compiled highlights and asked Alastair Harborne, an ecologist at Florida International University, to identify some of the most common species.

Grouper

A grouper swims by the underwater fish cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


Scrawled cowfish

A scrawled crowfish swims by the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach Pier.


Gray triggerfish

A gray triggerfish swims by the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


Porcupinefish

A porcupinefish swims by the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


Green turtles

Green turtles swim by the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


Lionfish

A lionfish swims by the underwater cam off the Deerfield Beach pier.


Black margate

A black margate swims past the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


Scrawled filefish

A scrawled filefish swims past the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


Lookdown

A lookdown fish swims past the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


A school of tarpon

A school of tarpon is seen swimming past the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


Blue runner

Blue runners are seen swimming past the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


A blenny

We can’t say whether or not this is King Benny, the blenny named by fans of the cam. FIU’s Harborne said this is probably a hairy blenny.

A hairy blenny hides in front of the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


Mutton snapper

A mutton snapper swims past the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


French angelfish

Harborne said this one is “intermediate age.” As it gets older, it will lose its stripes.

A French angelfish swims past the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


A sea jelly

And swimming behind it is a Bermuda chub.

A sea jelly and a Bermuda chub swim past the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


It’s not always sea life you’ll spot on the cam. Cormorants can occasionally be seen firing through the water like missiles, searching for a snack. Don’t blink or you might miss them.

Double-crested cormorant

A double-crested cormorant dives in front of the underwater camera beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


And sometimes the creatures don’t look quite as friendly.

Nurse shark

A nurse shark swims past the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


Great barracuda

A great barracuda swims by the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


Southern stingray

A southern stingray skims the bottom in front of the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


Michael Myers

We had questions. The city’s spokesperson, Medina Stewart, would only remind us that “Michael Myers never died. But then we can also say that the fish scared him away.” She added that some lucky viewers may also spot an occasional mermaid.

A strange shape is seen through the underwater cam beneath the Deerfield Beach pier.


The cam is simple, but the housing and mechanics are complex and require regular cleaning and maintenance by divers.

The "fish cam" under the Deerfield Beach pier is housed inside a glass ball and continuously streams the scene of creatures passing by under the surface.

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