However at night a different world comes to live, a world where you will see Spanish dancers, the school of
huge Bumphead parrotfish in their sleeping cocoons, Flashlight fish, Bobtail squid, sea moths, ghost pipefish, cuttlefish, starry night octopus, mimic octopus and different kinds of nudibranchs!
Reef sharks are found basking in the canyons, lobsters, cuttlefish, stingrays, tons of turtles in the shallows, and every full moon it is a favorite hangout for a school of
huge bumphead parrot fish.
Not exact matches
The dive sites are home to a
huge variety of tropical fish, from charismatic little critters like seahorses and ghost pipefish, through shoaling fish like fusiliers and sweetlips up to larger creatures including turtles and reef sharks,
bumphead parrotfish and barracuda.
If you have the time then we would certainly recommend staying several days but if you just have a day to spare then you will love diving around the wreck that is home to sweetlips, turtles,
bumphead parrot fish,
huge potato cod, reef sharks and the amazing schooling jackfish.
You can see
huge turtles, mantas, frogfish,
bumphead parrotfish and many more spieces of nudy branches.
Here you'll find enormous schools of barracuda and trevally, reef sharks,
huge schools of marauding
bumphead parrotfish, and more sea turtles than you can count.
Really nice hard coral formations there and the Yap Cavern is actually a big cut into the wall with a whole bunch of
huge coral heads and then you can swim through a maze and through tunnels with white sandy floor and you see a very large school of
bumphead parrot fish in there in the morning and some really beautiful anemones and soft corals.