I'd like some help here, friends. See the photo below. It's the top left-hand corner of an image shot at f32. I was lying on my belly near a flock of several dozen shorebirds. I wanted to show as much depth of field as possible. You see the result. It's as if I were photographing a meteor shower.
Facts
1. I bought the camera used for this shot, a Nikon D3S, in November 2010. I'm a very active shooter, but since I use only one lens (600 mm f4 Nikon, bought in August 2009), I don't expose the camera to the air very frequently.
2. I live in Shanghai, China. In my apartment here, more dust accumulates on my computer, furniture, and books in one day than accumulates in two months in my other home in Volusia County, Florida. Why do I say this? Just to show that when I do switch lenses (while in Shanghai), I'm exposing my D3S to some of the dustiest air in the world.
3. Before you comment, I'd like you to read this thread from last year.
http://www.birdphotographers.net/for...ighlight=spots
I want to know whether you think there's any connection between the spots (which still exist) on my lens and the spots you're seeing in the photo here.
4. Let me tell you how I clean the sensor on my D3S. With the lens off, I turn the camera face down, and, with the setting on mirror-up, I press the shutter release button. Next, I take my "rocket" (squeeze blower), and blow air into the camera. In "The Birdwatcher's Guide to Digital Photography," David Tipling recommends this technique, even though he says that some photographers don't like it, because it's possible to blow dust even deeper into the camera.
Questions
1. What caused my meteor shower?
2. What do you suggest I do about what seems to be an uncommonly high amount of dust in my D3S?


