Reef Stories

menu-to-close-2

Bats

Rabbits & Surgeons!



Fish Index

Fish



Sharks & Rays

Sharks & Rays

Anenome Fish

Anenome Fish

Anthias

Fairy Basslets

Angelfish

Angelfish

Batfish

Batfish

Barracuda & Travallies

Barracuda

Box-, File-& Pufferfiish

Box-, File-& Triggerfiosh

Blennies

Blennies

Butterflyfish

Butterflyfish

Cardinalfish

Cardinalfish

Dartfish

Dartfish

Dragonets

Dragonetes

Dottybacks

Dottybacks

Eels

Eels

Flatfish

Flatfish

Frogfish

Frogfish & Toadfish

Gobies

Gobies

Ghost Pipefish

Ghostpipefish

Hawkfish

Hawkfish

Jawfish

Jawfish

Sand-Divers

Sand-Divers

Scorpionfish

Seahorse

Seahorses

Seahorse

Snappers

Snapper

Surgeonfish

Surgeonfish

Sweetlips

Sweetlips

Triggerfish

Triggerfiish

Wrasse

Wrasse


Platax batavianus - juvenile
Platax batavianus - juvenile
Platax batavianus - juvenile
Platax orbicularis- juvenile
Platax orbicularis
Platax orbicularis
Platax pinnatus - juvenile
Platax pinnatus - juvenile
Platax pinnatus - juvenile
Platax pinnatus - juvenile
Platax pinnatus - juvenile in transition
Platax pinnatus - subadult
Platax pinnatus
Platax pinnatus
Platax teira - subadult
Platax teira
Platax teira
Platax teira
Platax teira


Siganus javus
Siganus puellus
Siganus vulpinus - juvenile
Siganus vulpinus
Siganus vulpinus


Acanthurus japonicus
Acanthurus lineatus
Acanthurus mata
Acanthurus mata
Acanthurus mata
Acanthurus mata
Acanthurus mata - at a cleaning station
Acanthurus nigrofuscus
Acanthurus pyroferus
Acanthurus triostegus
Ctenochaetus truncatus
Ctenochaetus truncatus - juvenile
Naso lituratus
Naso vlamingii
Zebrasoma scopas - juvenile
Zebrasoma scopas - juvenile
Zebrasoma velifer
Zebrasoma velifer

Help Save Reefs!



The organisations that work to protect coral reefs and our oceans need as much support as they can get. Check out:

If you are a diver, and especially if you are an underwater photographer, donate. If you do nothing, there will be nothing to dive on and nothing to photograph.

These are suggestions, but not endorsements of the suggested organisations. It is your responsibility to review and check the charities you wish to donate to.

Batfish

Batfish

The adults of this small family of large, rounded, diver-friendly fish are often seen in small groups at cleaner stations on the reef, or in larger aggregations mid-water close to drop-offs.

The young look quite different with their very elongated dorsal and anal fins. They stay close to the bottom or close to floating objects. Platax orbicularis juveniles mimic dead leavesmleaves, while the zebra-stripes of P. batavianus break up their form.

The spectacular jet-black young of P. pinnatus have brilliant orange margins to all their fins and body. The young juveniles in particular, swim in the dark recesses of bommies covered in many corals. As such they are quite difficult to make out as you do not see a fish, just orange lines moving in a dark hole. The flatworm "Pseudobiceros hankockanus" is also black with an orange margin, and it is often suggested that the juvenile batfish mimic these flatworms as they are poisonous.

Platax batavianus - juvenile
Platax batavianus - juvenile
Platax orbicularis- juvenile
Platax orbicularis
Platax orbicularis
Platax pinnatus - juvenile
Platax pinnatus - juvenil
Platax pinnatus - juvenile
Platax pinnatus - subadult
Platax pinnatus
Platax teira - subadult
Platax teira
Platax teira
Platax teira

Rabbitfish

Rabbitfish

There is only the one genus in this small family of common reef fish. They have a very characteristic overhanging upper lip, and very small scales. The body shape is similar to surgeonfish.

They feed mostly on seagrass and benthic algae, but some species consume quanitites of sponges and tunicates.

Siganus javus
Siganus puellus
Siganus vulpinus - juvenile
Siganus vulpinus
Siganus vulpinus

Surgeonfish

Surgeonfish

Surgeonfish get their name from razor-sharp spines or keels at the base of their tails. In the Lined Surgeonfish (Acanthurus lineatus), these are poisonous. A number of species are able to change their colour very quickly.

Some (e.g. Acanthurus mata) come together in large schools while most are either solitary or seen in small groups. Most are algae-feeders, and are in fact the dominant reef vegetarians, playing an important role in the reef ecosystem. Members of the genus Naso feed on plankton mid-water.

Acanthurus japonicus
Acanthurus lineatus
Acanthurus mata
Acanthurus mata
Acanthurus mata - at a cleaning station
 Acanthurus nigrofuscus
Acanthurus pyroferus
Acanthurus triostegus
Ctenochaetus truncatus
Ctenochaetus truncatus - juvenile
Naso lituratus
Naso vlamingii
Zebrasoma scopas - juvenile
Zebrasoma scopas - juvenile
Zebrasoma velifer
Zebrasoma velifer