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  2. Wildlife of the Maldives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildlife_of_the_Maldives

    There is a wide diversity of sea life in the Maldives, with corals and over 2,000 species of fish, ranging from colourful reef fish to the blacktip reef shark, moray eels, and a wide variety of rays: manta ray, stingray, and eagle ray. The Maldivian waters are also home to the whale shark.

  3. Fishing industry in the Maldives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fishing_industry_in_the...

    Island, subsiding asymmetrically within its fringing reef in the Maldives Subsided island leaves a coral lagoon in the Maldives. Reef fisheries are fisheries for reef fish and other organisms that live among coral reefs. The Maldives contain 2.86 percent of the world coral reefs. [2]

  4. Blackcheek moray eel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackcheek_moray_eel

    This moray eel occurs in clear seaward reefs of oceanic islands, especially in porous coral rock and in reef walls and steep slopes with holes. [5] It likes reefs composed of rubble and debris of dead coral in which it finds its shelter, often on the outer slopes between 4 and 40 meters deep.

  5. 32 types of saltwater fish for your aquarium - AOL

    www.aol.com/32-types-saltwater-fish-aquarium...

    Wild habitat: Indo-Pacific: Maldives to the Phoenix Islands, north to the Ryukyu Islands, south to the southern Great Barrier Reef; throughout Micronesia. 10. Lawnmower blenny

  6. Baa Atoll Biosphere Reserve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baa_Atoll_Biosphere_Reserve

    The main habitat types found in the reserve are coral reefs, islands, sea grass beds and mangroves. Coral reefs are the most important habitat type in terms of area as well as biodiversity. Maldivian coral reefs are home to the richest diversity in the region and are the seventh largest in the world, accounting for 5% of the world's reef area.

  7. Amblyglyphidodon indicus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amblyglyphidodon_indicus

    Amblyglyphidodon indicus also known as the Maldives damselfish is a species of fish in the family Pomacentridae. It is native to the Indian Ocean, including the Red Sea and the Maldives. [2] The fish reaches 8.3 centimeters in length. [2] Its diet includes zooplankton and floating organic material. [3] It is likely that this fish is reef ...

  8. Atolls of the Maldives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atolls_of_the_Maldives

    The islands in the atolls of the Maldives rest on the shelf provided by the reefs. Many reefs have no islands at all, but all islands in the Maldives have an underlying coralline reef. Usually islands are flat and sandy. Often there is a rocky bottom made up of a coral rock conglomerate underneath the island proper.

  9. Diving in the Maldives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diving_in_the_Maldives

    Maldives soft coral Oriental sweetlips (Plectorhinchus vittatus) at Meeru Island, North Male Atoll. The Maldives have a range of different habitats including deep sea, shallow coast, and reef ecosystems, fringing mangroves, wetlands and dry land. There are 187 species of coral forming the coral reefs.