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Scuba Diving Small Dos Amigos Dive Whales Cocos Island |
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Among Cocos Island’s many attributes is a startling degree of biodiversity. This Island’s world-renowned waters explode with life; including innumerable white tip reef sharks, schooling hammerhead sharks, dolphins, mantas and marbled rays, giant moray eels, sailfish, and of course the occasional whale shark. Other common encounters are large schools of jacks and tuna, silky sharks, silver tip sharks, marlin, Creole fish, green turtles and octopus.
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| Click here for more details about Undersea Hunter & Cocos Island & Malpelo Island |
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Scuba Diving Small Dos Amigos Dive Whales Cocos Island |
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Cocos Island is also home to at least twenty seven endemic fish species including the exotic red-lipped batfish. The terrestrial life at Cocos also exhibits a high number of endemic plants. Here there exist around seventy out of the two hundred thirty five identified vascular plant species in the world, some twenty five species of moss, twenty seven species of liverwort and eighty five species of fungus. There are upwards of eighty seven bird species, including the famous Cocos Island cuckoo, finch and flycatcher. There are three hundred sixty two species of insects, of which sixty four are endemic, and two native reptiles.
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| Click here for more details about Undersea Hunter & Cocos Island & Malpelo Island |
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Scuba Diving Small Dos Amigos Dive Whales Cocos Island |
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Depth: 60 - 120 ft. 18 - 36 m. Marine life: Hammerheads, white tips, mobula rays, eagle rays, whale sharks, dolphins, silkies, dolphins.The southernmost part of the island, Dos Amigos Pequeño, is not always accessible during the rainy season due to the rough surge around this exposed site. When accessible it is well worth the visit because this is where the open sea current first reaches the island, bringing with it exciting surprises.
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| Click here for more details about Undersea Hunter & Cocos Island & Malpelo Island |
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