Sentences with phrase «large eagle rays»

Large eagle rays patrol the plankton rich waters completely at ease in the strong currents.
A large eagle ray was circling around when we finally exited the tunnel.

Not exact matches

Look a little deeper and you may see larger pelagics, eagle rays, marble rays and, in season Mola Mola (Sunfish).
Large sharks such as the tiger shark and great hammerhead shark prey on the spotted eagle ray.
This site is a large volcanic pinnacle awash in marine life, including large schools of barracuda, eagle rays, sea lions and sea turtles.
In the course of a single dive, you may find schooling hammerhead sharks, large numbers Galapagos and silky sharks, eagle rays, thick schools of skipjack and yellowfin tuna, and even a pod or two of bottlenose dolphins.
The current flows down both sides of Turneffe Atoll and converges at the dive site attracting large schools of jacks, snappers, sharks, eagle rays and larger fish than you are likely to see elsewhere on the Belize reefs.
Bait balls, a variety of sharks, tuna, snapper, large grouper, and eagle rays are all possibilities at this world class dive site.
Large pelagic's encountered here include tuna, jacks, gray and white tip reef sharks, barracuda, and eagle rays.
This area is home to numerous spotted eagle rays and large southern stingrays.
It is home for corals, sponges, eagle rays, dolphins and the largest living barrier reef in the world (and our own Blue Marlin Lodge!)
This is where we begin to find small groups of the very largest spotted eagle rays cruising the reef.
Spotted eagle rays and turtles are most common, but occasionally sharks and large black groupers visit the area.
rays are still seen, but the small groups of large spotted eagle rays are ever present.
Turtles are regularly seen here and there is good chance of seeing manta and large spotted eagle rays.
Spotted eagle rays and stingrays of alI but the largest sizes are also here.
Eagle rays glide around the C - 58 wreck and the iron skeleton of the Ultrafreeze harbors large morays and goliath grouper.
Also keep an eye on the deep parts of the reef below you, and on the open sea, for large pelagics, such as eagle rays and huge groupers or jewfish.
Large spotted eagle rays and turtles also frequent the wall of this dive site.
The very largest of manta rays and good specimens of spotted eagle rays are frequently seen.
In the canyons below, large groupers, turtles and balloon fish can be seen among enormous gorgonians, and out in the blue, the occasional sharks and spotted eagle rays add to the excitement of this dive.
The dive sites in the Surin area are often known for the presence of large pelagics (usually eagle and manta rays, but also whale sharks), usually from February to April.
While diving throughout the Turneffe Atoll, you will see a variety of hard and soft corals as well as all of the Caribbean tropicals, eagle rays, sharks, turtles, dolphins, moray eels, and occasionally a whale shark in addition to large schools of permit, horse eye jacks and dog snapper.
These volcanic rock formations are home to a large variety of sea life, including white tip reef sharks, giant manta rays, eagle and devil rays, sea turtles, octopi, lion fish, moray eels and sea turtles.
Large pelagics such as sharks, eagle rays, loggerhead turtles, spotted rays, octopus and barracudas share the sites with a spectrum of macro life.
Schools of tarpon frequent the area shining in the filtered sunlight and larger pelagic life such as eagle rays and turtles swim off in the blue.
larger animals like eagle rays, turtles and nurse sharks can also be seen!
Common larger pelagics include oceanic white tips, manta ray, spotted eagle ray and the ever elusive hammerhead.
This pinnacle is one of most spectacular dive sites in the Mergui archipelago with an excellent variety of reef life and abundance of large pelagics including Silvertips, Gray reef sharks, Blacktips, Bull sharks, Eagle and Manta rays.
You may also find eagle rays here and other larger fish like wrasse or reef sharks.
There are plenty of the larger reef fish: unicorns, parrotfish and Napoleon Wrasse, but also turtles, white tipped reef sharks and often eagle rays.
The first day of diving: eagle rays, turtle, beautiful reef fish large and small, capped off with an amazing long visit with dolphins!
Few places can promise such numbers and density of sharks as well as manta rays, eagle rays, and many large and meaty reef predators...
See large barrel and colorful tube sponges, eagle rays, brilliantly colored fish and more.
Schools of jacks, mackerels, tunas and snapper, large groupers, sometimes devil rays, eagle rays, cow - nose rays and mobula ray are common visitors at this offshore reef.
Wrecks, drop - offs and channels make for a good variety of sites and larger reef fish, turtles and spotted eagle rays are frequently sighted.
Other highlights include eagle rays, seahorses, dolphins and a variety of sharks in large numbers.
Often seen are turtles, moray eels, barracuda, large mackerel, eagle rays, southern sting rays, as well as several shark species.
In the waters of the park, visitors can expect to see pristine coral reefs, steep walls dropping from the reef crest to the abyss, large populations of fish including Goliath grouper weighing up to 400 lbs, large schools of multiple snapper species, large rainbow and midnight parrotfishes, eagle rays, sea turtles and much more.
Divers can see tropical fish, sharks that can be in groups as large as two hundred, bottlenose dolphins, green turtles, manta and eagle rays, and countless colorful coral.
Pulau Weh is also well known for its larger inhabitants such as reef sharks, manta and eagle rays, tuna, jacks, trevallies, barracuda, bumphead parrotfish and Napoleon wrasse.
Eagle rays pass by the large dock on rare occasion and star fish abound off this white beach.
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