coral reef studies blog

Marine Life

What Swimming With Dolphins Actually Feels Like

What Swimming With Dolphins Actually Feels Like

Swimming with dolphins sits somewhere between genuine wildlife encounter and managed tourist activity. Most people arrive with images in their head – calm water, playful dolphins, a moment of connection. The reality is messier, more unpredictable, and often depends entirely…

Nurse Sharks in the Maldives: What Actually Happens Underwater

Nurse Sharks in the Maldives: What Actually Happens Underwater

Nurse sharks in the Maldives exist in a strange middle ground between the feared and the mundane. They’re not the apex predators that dominate reef mythology, but they’re also not the docile creatures some resorts imply. Spending time in the…

What Wakes Up When Night Falls on the Reef

What Wakes Up When Night Falls on the Reef

The reef at night is not the same reef you saw at midday. This isn’t poetic exaggeration – it’s a fundamental shift in who lives where and what’s hunting. When the sun drops below the horizon and the water temperature…

What Reef Soundscapes Reveal About Ocean Life

What Reef Soundscapes Reveal About Ocean Life

Most travelers arrive at coral reefs expecting silence. They slip beneath the surface, hold their breath, and anticipate a quiet, peaceful escape from the noise of the world above. What they actually encounter is something entirely different. The reef is…

Giant Clams of the Reef: Living Fossils in Colour

Giant Clams of the Reef: Living Fossils in Colour

The first time you see a giant clam on a reef, you don’t quite believe it’s alive. It sits there like something sculpted from stone and stained glass, a creature that seems to belong more to geology than biology. The…

Seahorses and Pipefish of the Great Barrier Reef

Seahorses and Pipefish of the Great Barrier Reef

The first time you spot a seahorse on the Great Barrier Reef, you understand why they’ve captivated human imagination for centuries. They’re impossibly small, impossibly fragile-looking, and impossibly difficult to find if you don’t know where to look. Most visitors…

Crown-of-Thorns Starfish: Reef Predator or Ecological Scapegoat

Crown-of-Thorns Starfish: Reef Predator or Ecological Scapegoat

The first time you encounter a crown-of-thorns starfish underwater, there’s a moment of genuine unease. The creature is visibly alien – a bulbous, spiny disc that moves with deliberate slowness across the reef, leaving a trail of bleached coral in…

Caribbean Sea Turtles: Recovery in Protected Waters

Caribbean Sea Turtles: Recovery in Protected Waters

Three sea turtle species nest in the Caribbean: green, hawksbill, and loggerhead turtles. Once hunted to near-extinction, turtle populations are recovering through protection and international cooperation. Turtle Biology and Life History Sea turtles are long-lived reptiles with complex life histories.…