"This type of coral, in this place, was probably known for generations by some Polynesians," he told AFP.

But his team, like the scientists from CRIOBE, a French laboratory for the study of coral ecosystems, did not imagine such immensity when they came across this treasure in November.

Equipped with rebreathers, these "little factories" which allow divers to stay underwater for up to five hours, Alexis Rosenfeld and his partners had just begun a "delicate descent into the blue".

In the image, the roses come out blue, because "the red is absorbed by the layer of water".

Since its publication on January 20, his photo of this coral field has been around the world, to the front page of the Washington Post.

This reef, three kilometers long and 30 to 65 meters wide, is between 30 and 65 meters deep.

And it shows no signs of stress or disease, when corals located closer to the surface, in French Polynesia, are suffering from global warming and experienced a bleaching episode in 2019. "An extraordinary discovery", estimated Unesco.

For Laëtitia Hedouin, marine biologist at CNRS and CRIOBE, this discovery is "good news", which suggests that "deeper reefs are perhaps better protected from global warming".

Because the preservation of corals is a key issue: ecological niches, they shelter at least a quarter of marine biodiversity.

Reefs are also powerful tools in the fight against coastal erosion.

French diver and underwater photographer Alexis Rosenfeld in Marseille, January 24, 2022 Nicolas TUCAT AFP

After twenty days of diving on this site, in November, Alexis Rosenfeld and his team will continue the exploration deeper, where they have already seen fields of gorgonians, also called + bark corals +.

80% of unexplored seabed

"The seabed is the most unexplored part of our planet: we have mapped 20% of it, we know very few species, there is everything to do", recalls the photographer-diver.

This is also the whole meaning of the United Nations decade (2021-2030) for ocean science for sustainable development, which aims to "invest massively in oceanography".

In this device, Alexis Rosenfeld plays the role of "witness" via his "1Ocean" campaign.

By 2030, it will notably have to produce 1,000 photographs of the depths and distribute them to the general public, for example via monumental exhibitions in stations in France.

Equipped with his Unesco-branded suit, he is already thinking of the images he will be able to capture on the Aldabra atoll in the Seychelles, the largest refuge for giant land tortoises, preserved from human influence and listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Unesco.

Or on the reefs of Entrecasteaux, in New Caledonia, "probably one of the most pristine regions in the world".

An Aldabra giant tortoise on Cousin Island, a nature reserve in the Seychelles, on November 21, 2019 Yasuyoshi CHIBA AFP/Archives

With one ambition: "to build awareness" for the protection of the oceans.

"It goes through beauty, but I think that the alerts of (the environmental activist) Camille Etienne, the actions of Hugo Clément (Editor's note: journalist and environmental activist), the messages of the WWF or the actions of Greenpeace are also essential, it's a real ecosystem that is on the move for the planet of tomorrow", he wants to believe.

But he also sees the less beautiful: "Not so long ago we were in Marseille, in the creeks, to show the absolutely disgusting aspect" of the waste.

© 2022 AFP