Sentences with phrase «school angelfish»

«Back to School Angelfish Blowout» is one good catch phrase.

Not exact matches

But angelfish are fighters: A school's social hierarchy is determined through combat, with fish using their mouths to wrestle and their tails as clubs.
Clouds of angelfish and chromis can be seen amongst the schools of other fish.
If you book a diving experience, not only can you expect to see turtles, blue - lined octopi, schools of white spotted eagle rays, an array of tropical fish including emperor angelfish and clown triggerfish, but grey nurse sharks and leopard sharks often pay the rocks a visit.
The Blue Hole is famous for its sponges, barracuda, corals, angelfish, and a school of sharks often seen patrolling the hole's edge.
The ocean water is also known for its clarity, and a wide array of sea turtles, schools of angelfish, butterfly fish, parrot fish, eels, coral on the seafloor, and more!
Shallower sites in this region feature groves of staghorn, elkhorn and brain corals, covered in schools of blue tangs, wrasse, grunts, and snappers, and harboring queen angelfish, parrotfish and spotted trunkfish.
Rays and schooling jacks are frequently seen, and the most common reef tropicals such as groupers, coneys, angelfish and barracuda are almost sure to be seen.
Pufferfish, boxfish and angelfish all abound here and there are normally schools of tiny glassfish being terrorised by the marauding jacks.
The marine life is more diverse there with Napoleon wrasse, turtles, large cube boxfish, clown triggerfish, schools of batfish, yellow goatfish, palette surgeonfish, blue - faced angelfish and bannerfish.
Today the Blue Hole is famed for its sponges, barracuda, corals, angelfish, and a school of sharks often seen patrolling the hole's edge.
The bay that Angelfish blue hole is located in, is home to a school of eagle rays and turtles.
A school of yellow angelfish linger by the reef.
Our next dive site was Half Moon Caye Wall swimming with Schools of Jacks, Creole Wrasses, Angelfish, Trumpetfish, Reef Sharks and Eaglerays.
While underwater at Shark Point we saw Schools of Creole Wrasses, Sailfin Blennies, Spotted Eels, Colorful Queen Angelfish and Caribbean Reef Sharks.
Ocean blue holes are considered some of the most unusual dive sites here, and you can find large schools of reef fish, like sergeant majors, chromis, and angelfish.
Here you may see sea turtles, angelfish, schools of sweetlips and plenty more.
Again another soft coral and color spectacle... The sea fans with pygmies, the schools of silver sight fish, snappers, sweet lips, a lot of groupers and barramundi cods, and high presence of angelfish.
The 32 - 49 ft (10 - 15m) reef is covered with a delightful garden of hard and soft corals and is frequently visited by schools of grunts, snappers, chromis and angelfish.
The dive site is located within the Lighthouse Atoll and lives true to its name: the area is bursting with aquatic life with an abundance of schooling fish from School Master Snappers, Creole Wrasse, Queen Angelfish, Banded Butterflyfish and Honeycomb Trunkfish.
Along with many juveniles and moral eels taking shelter in the corals, you can also expect to have the opportunity to dive with Nassau grouper, sting rays, amberjacks, sergeant majors and reef sharks while large schools of yellowfish and angelfish swim by.
Angel City sits between the two reefs and gets its name from the schools of French angelfish found here.
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