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.
The reef gardens are teeming with fish including French, gray and
queen angelfish, indigo hamlets, trumpetfish, butterflyfish, parrotfish, chromis, gobies and fairy basslets.
Hundreds of barracuda's and rabbitfish escort you during this dive and
queen angelfish love this reef.
While underwater at Shark Point we saw Schools of Creole Wrasses, Sailfin Blennies, Spotted Eels, Colorful
Queen Angelfish and Caribbean Reef Sharks.
Blue angelfish,
queen angelfish, rock beauties, French angelfish and gray angelfish also inhabit the reefs of the western Caribbean.
Listen to your guide's commentary to learn about the marine life you see; the warm, tropical waters of the Bahamas are home to beautiful coral reefs and a fascinating array of fish including blue tang, surgeonfish and
queen angelfish.
Here you might spot blue tangs, foureye butterflyfish or the rather splendid
queen angelfish amongst the soft corals and small gorgonian fans.
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.
Queen angelfish are particularly impressive subjects here.
Look in the small coral gardens for
queen angelfish (Holacanthus ciliaris), stoplight parrotfish (Spartisoma viride) including juveniles, and yellowhead wrasse (Halichoeres garnoti).
The Dive Bermuda reef sites are full of aquatic life including: jack, snapper, spiny lobster, parrotfish, and stunning
Queen Angelfish.
A piqued
queen angelfish — «Isabelita» — watches from the darkness.
Not exact matches
Sea turtles,
angelfish and
queen triggerfish make lazy passes around the upper decks, while the sands near the keep hide squirrelfish, purple mouth morays, flying gurnards and — for the keen - eyed observer, a population of seahorses.