Sentences with phrase «many wobbegongs»

Under the existing system, the public is unable to tell scratches from fatalities, boats from people or wobbegongs from great whites.
At one point, they didn't even seem to notice a bottom - dwelling wobbegong shark sneaking up.
Other popular diving and snorkeling spots include Halifax Park (best site for wobbegong sharks), Little Beach (a recommended spot to see turtles), and the Seahorse Gardens (the name gives it away!).
You'll also see five - foot whiprays, wobbegong, and zebra sharks as well as a veteran 500 - pound green sea turtle.
During our dives we spotted some reef sharks, a massive cow tailed ray and the weird looking but fantastically named wobbegong shark.
A host of other notable performers include several species of sharks (whale, bamboo, wobbegong and white tips), humpback whales, turtles, dolphins, seahorses, octopus, lionfish and cuttlefish, as well as a dazzling coral garden.
Raja Ampat alone is home to over fifteen - hundred different species of fish and a large variety of sharks and rays, including wobbegong sharks, oceanic manta rays as well as the reef manta rays.
The guided snorkelling tour is comparable to the Great Barrier Reef snorkel either Flinders Reef: which has the highest number of coral and fish species out of all sub-tropical reef systems, or the Tangalooma Wrecks with its myriad of marine species including Wobbegongs, Coral and fish tame enough to eat from your hands.
Creature Feature Index Barracuda Bumphead Parrotfish Clownfish Clown Triggerfish Cuttlefish Dolphins Dwarf Minke Whales Frogfish Giant Galapagos Tortoises Great White Sharks Harlequin Ghostpipefish Komodo Dragons Leopard Sharks Lionfish Mandarinfish Manta Rays Marine Iguanas Mimic Octopus Moray Eels Napoleon Wrasse Nudibranchs Orang Utans Scalloped Hammerhead Sharks Sea Horses Sea Lions Sunfish Tawny Nurse Sharks Titan Triggerfish Trevallies Turtles Whale Sharks Wobbegongs
The reserve is home to three different species of sea turtle, an assortment of rays including mantas, hard and soft corals, friendly wobbegong sharks and over four hundred different species of fish.
There are plenty of sharks to be seen in Raja Ampat from white and black tipped reef sharks to whale sharks and even some rarer ones such as wobbegong shark.
Our Dive Site: Julian Rocks Here the reserve is home to three different species of sea turtle, an assortment of rays including mantas, hard and soft corals, friendly wobbegong sharks and over four hundred different species of fish.
Schools of manta rays, reef sharks and wobbegongs may grab the limelight, but the real beauty lies in the variety of colourful smaller creatures that you can see, such as nudibranchs, shrimps, crabs and other crustaceans, pipefish and seahorses.
The itinerary will offer us the chance to dive with never ending fields of soft corals, schooling fish, the mysterious wobbegong shark, mantas, and so much more!
Although seeing that many wobbegongs and that many fish was fantastic, my highlight of this dive was the group of porcupine fish, with two of them being very curious and approaching us.
We had multiple wobbegong sightings at other sites in the north, as well as a few manta sightings at Kawe's awesome sites, and our guests were all mesmerised by the beauty of the blue water mangroves at Yangefo.
From whale sharks to wobbegongs, manta rays to mandarinfish, sea lions to seahorses,, read on for more information about the real stars of our underwater scuba world:
Aside from whale watching and pelagic birding trips, Oz Whale Watching offers guided tours around Sydney National Harbour, including snorkelling at Shelley Beach to try and spot blue groper, dusky butterflyfish, black rock cod, wobbegongs, cuttlefish, potbelly seahorses and weedy sea dragons.
Among the best experiences you can have whilst scuba diving in Raja Ampat are encounters with indigenous wobbegongs, the incredible topside beauty of Waigeo, the mushroom islands and lagoons of Misool, and the sheer joy of simply drifting over some of the most pristine and colourful coral scenes on Earth.
You'll probably see a myriad of fish, like cod, wobbegong, batfish and leopard sharks.
We saw 5 wobbegong sharks, Juvenile Batfish and big school of Baraccudas not mentioning huge number of fusiliers fish in the blue and thousands of colourful reef fish.
Loads of wobbegongs which I have never seen before as well as walking sharks.
We found school of bat fish, sweetlips fish, wobbegong shark and many other interesting fish.
During the dive, from time to time you see big rocks and boomies with a lot of macro stuff around as nudibranch, crabs, pygmy sea horses and also wobbegong sharks below.
There may be grey reefs, white tips, black tips, and even wobbegongs.
We also saw bumphead parrot fish, sweetlips fish, many spade fish, angle fish, nudibranch and wobbegong shark.
To name only a few of all the amazing sea life we could observe: many varieties of Pygmy seahorse, beautiful broccoli corals, wobbegong, giant clams, epaulette shark, and many more.
The resort is centrally positioned within the Raja Ampat marine park, just 10 minutes away from Manta Sandy and well - known manta cleaning station, in an area known for five different species of pygmy sea horse, and endemic sharks like the ornate wobbegong and the epaulette bamboo shark.
We saw big schools of 3 different type of fusiliers, 2 big napoleon wrasse, 2 wobbegong sharks, nudibranch, bump head parrotfish, white tip shark, school of sweetlips fish, school of snapper and many other amazing fish.
If you're looking for something a bit more unique, the tassled wobbegong shark is a strange looking bottom - dwelling shark with incredible camoflague.
We saw many schools of fish and also wobbegong shark, grey reef shark, schools of sweetlips fish, barracudas, tunas, big school of jackfish and a lot of glass fish.
Third dive was in Bo s Rainbow, also stunning soft coral again, Wobbegongs, marble ray and nudibranchs.
We also spotted 2 wobbegong sharks and some beautiful nudibranch..
We saw: huge number of yellow sweetlips fish, spade fish, 2 wobbegong sharks, couple of nudibranch, snappers, surgeon, rabbit fish and fusiliers playing in the blue.
We spotted: pigmy sea horse, candy crabs, bobtail squid, wobbegong shark, frogfish, toad fish, stone fish, nudibranch and at the end of the dive walking shark!
-- Hugo's Trench: This dive spot has sheer walls on either side of the trench, and is frequented by wobbegong sharks, turtles and schools of fish.
We saw: 2 wobbegong sharks, pigmy cuttle fish, hermit crabs, spider crabs and many different types of shrimps.
High chance of seeing sharks (whitetip, blacktip reef, nurse and wobbegong) on some of the dive sites (Tanjung Sari / Shark Point, Ferry Channel).
We also saw: bumphead parrotfish, 2 wobbegong sharks and very rare walking shark!
After a nice breakfast we jumped again in the water, dive site was Batu Jeruk, were we saw big schools of snappers, baby Wobbegongs, fantastic soft coral and a lot of different nudibranchs and shrimps.
We saw 5 wobbegong sharks, black tip shark, school of spade fish, moray eel, juvenile spade fish and napoleon wrasse.
When diving Blue Lagoon in Padangbai you have a big chance to see white tip and black tip reef sharks, sometimes even a wobbegong shark, turtles, cuttle fish, giant frog fish, ghost pipe fish, moray eels, seahorses, mantis shrimp, clown fish, banner fis and so much more.
When you're not looking at the tightly packed schools this is a great site for macro life including nudibranch, mantis shrimps, pygmy seahorses, octopus and cuttlefish but if that's not enough, look out for the resting wobbegong sharks under the table corals.
Within your first few dives, you are likely to spot the wobbegong.
Teeming with marine life, the wrecks are home to more than 175 species of reef fish such as yellowtail, kingfish and lionfish, as well as moray eels, turtles, dolphins, stingrays and harmless wobbegong sharks, all totally unmoved by human presence.
Julian Rocks Marine Reserve is home to three different species of sea turtle, an assortment of rays, hard and soft corals, friendly wobbegong sharks and over five hundred different species of fish.
Loads of Wobbegongs and turtles.
Highlights include: Large schools of fish, manta rays, reef sharks, wobbegong sharks, walking sharks, turtles, Spanish mackerel, tuna, barracuda, pygmy sea horses, nudibranchs galore, ghost pipefish, cuttlefish, crustaceans and stunning pristine coral reefs.
Highlights include: manta rays, mobula rays, wobbegongs, grey reef sharks, Napoleon wrasse, painted frogfish, octopus, Spanish dancers and mandarinfish.
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