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White-margined moray
Barred Fin Moray
This species has 2-4 longitudinal rows of brown blotches on its body and a band on its fins; Pale bands and blotches on its jaw and a dark brown band at the rear edge of its eye. Solitary. It lives alone in reef crevices.
Giant Moray
Characteristic: Brown with irregular dark brown spots on head, body and fins, black blotch on gill opening. Solitary. Most common large moray. Inhabits reef holes of lagoon and outer reefs at 1-46m. Size up to 239 cm
White Eye Moray
Whitish or pale yellow-brown with dense scattering of small brown spots. Purplish gray head with distinctive white iris. Solitary or in small groups. Crevices of shallow reef flats to 7 m. Size up to 65 cm.
Snowflake moray
This species is easily recognized by its snow white nose with yellow nostrils and yellow and black markings across the body. It can be found on most of our dive sites. It hides in cracks under the corals on the reefs and under moorings and sponges on the muck sites. During night dives is often seen in the open looking for food. Mostly solitary, but can be sharing its hide out with other moray species.
Fimbriated moray
Solitary species. Hides inside crevices, debris or under moorings or during the day. This moray species is easy to identify for its pointy snout and yellow – green coloured body with pattern of black or dark brown spots.