There is a sequence involving coral reef and «murk» where the coral reef ends and
where the cuttlefish thrives.
Not exact matches
It is the muck diving capital of the world
where you can hunt for amazing critters such as hairy frogfish, sea horses, flamboyant
cuttlefish and mimic octopus.
We offer everything from summer diving
where the water temperature hovers around 26 degrees through to winter diving when the
Cuttlefish arrive (approximately end of May) with the water visibility approximately 20 metres.
These sandy bottom sites can be accessed directly from the resort's Dive Centre,
where guests can gaze upon colourful corals, whiptail rays, green turtles and possibly even a flamboyant
cuttlefish or two!
Scorpion fish and
cuttlefish often spotted on the top of the pinnacle
where glassfish swarm around a large area of mushroom coral.
The reef continues down to 18m
where all sorts of life such as moray eels, lobsters and
cuttlefish can be spotted.
At the moment we know exactly
where to find pygmy seahorses, ornate ghost pipefish, stargazer, frogfish and more incredible marine life such as the flamboyant
cuttlefish (that we named animal of the month in march) and the blue ringed octopus.
You will spend most of the time in and around a series of rocky patches
where you are also likely to see
cuttlefish, ribbon eels, cockatoo leaf fish and various pipefish.
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!
The excursions take place in more than 20 different shore dive and boat dive sites
where you'll have the chance to see everything from barracuda, octopus and
cuttlefish to turtles, angel sharks and rays.
Dive the incredible reefs of Raja Ampat, Komodo, and the Banda Sea
where you will find a great variety of fish, corals, gorgonian sea fans, sponges, nudibranchs, shrimps, crabs,
cuttlefish, octopus and giant clams.
In this new work, «Ways to Scale», Cooper explores a type of genetic alteration which happens amongst cephalopods — squid, octopi,
cuttlefish and nautiluses
where they have the ability to alter the genetic makeup of their cells, fine - tuning the information encoded by their genes without altering the genes themselves.