by
Juan CortesSnorkeling with giant mantas. San Benedicto Island, Revillagigedo, Mexico.
Canon G12 Ikelite housing. Natural light.
by
Fred RemersThis close encounter with a manta ray took place in the Archipelago Revillagigedos by San Benedicto Island on a dive site called the Boiler. It was taken with a Canon T3i in an Ikelite housing with an Ikelite DS-125 strobe.
by
Fred RemersEye to eye with a manta ray. Photo taken in the Archipelago Revillagigedos by San Benedicto Island on a dive site called the Boiler. It was taken with a Canon T3i in an Ikelite housing with an Ikelite DS-125 strobe.
by
Christian NielsenImage shot on San Benedicto Island, Socorro. Fantastic diving with friendly manta's. This was a shot that I planned from home (getting a bit above). Turned out to be rather difficult (light, visibility, composition). Well here is the result.
by
Christian NielsenBig trevally on the fantasttic divesite, the boiler, San Benedicto Island.
by
Christian NielsenMy wife and a friendly manta in silhouette. The Boiler, San Benedicto Island.
by
Christian NielsenBlack manta with accompanying remora's. The boiler, San Benedicto Island. A very special place :-)
by
Christian NielsenClarion angel fish. Find these in the Socorro Islands, and the manta's are close. The only fish cleaning manta's in this area.
San Benedicto Island, the boiler
by
Christian NielsenWhitetip in the grandiose and dramatic scenery of San Benedicto Island.
by
Christian NielsenBeautiful manta and happy divers at "the Boiler", Socorro. Fantastic rock. I like the volcanic layers you can see in the image. A unique place.
by
Christian NielsenAnother manta shot. Hope I don't bore you. But I really like these animals, even though it is difficult to capture their beauty in a photo.
by
Christian NielsenBeautiful manta at "The Boiler".
by
Christian Nielsen2 manta's, one diveguide and a spectacular rock. Doesn't get much better :-)
by
Christian NielsenBig manta and diver on "The Boiler", San Benedicto Island.
by
David ValenciaThese were sailfish finishing a baitball and moving to another. We kept having to jump into the boat, find them, and jump in again. They would attack the bait for awhile, but would move on. One of my friends jumped in with scuba for a different look.
by
David ValenciaWe were "blue water hunting", looking for things in blue water. It only took these silky sharks a few minutes to show up. More and more accumulated and in the end we had close to 200 hundred silkies. It was impossible to fit them all in the frame.
by
David ValenciaThis diver and I watched numerous sailfish and even striped marlin feed on this tiny baitball. In our experience, there is more action on the smaller baitballs.
by
David ValenciaThis striped marlin and dolphin tag-teamed the bait until it was no more. They didn't attack it like you would expect. They moved slow and deliberate, as if the bait knew they didn't have a chance.
by
David ValenciaThese are false killer whales that frequent isla san benedicto. They can be very friendly and curious of divers. This day we ran into a huge aggregation of more than 200 individuals. Most were too busy to pay us any attention, but these two did.
by
David ValenciaThis friendly black manta played behind the boat for hours. It allowed everyone to jump in and have a play. He stayed on the surface the entire time.
by
David ValenciaBaitball action with silky sharks and yellowfin tuna.
by
David ValenciaThis Giant Pacific Manta stops at a cleaning station to get cleaned by the bright orange Clarion Angelfish. You can see the parasites on the skin of the manta as well as the remora.
by
David ValenciaA rare sighting of a thresher shark milling around underneath a baitball. This was taken while freediving.
by
David ValenciaDuring a feeding frenzy in a baitball this silky shark forgot to wipe his mouth...
by
David ValenciaGiant Pacific Black Manta swimming with snorkeler. This manta hung out for hours looking for the attention of all divers.
by
David ValenciaSilky shark and yellow fin tunas in the background.
by
David ValenciaA creative look at some baitball action in San Benedicto. This is a Silky shark moving through a huge baitball in a feeding frenzy.
by
David ValenciaHere are some very friendly bottle nose dolphins. It's a mother, a juvenile, and a newborn. I encountered them in blue water a few miles from San Benedicto Island.
by
David ValenciaGiant Pacific mantas chasing one another during a courtship dance.
by
David ValenciaA Tiger sharks leads a school of hammerheads straight to me...
by
David ValenciaOur lucky night....A night dive with a whale shark.
by
David ValenciaA giant pacific manta stops at a cleaning station. The bright orange clarion angelfish clean parasites and dead skin.
by
Alejandro TopeteManta Ray and the sun, Revillagigedo Mexico
by
David ValenciaA Giant Pacific Manta swims over a cleaning station. The manta will stay in this location swimming circles and getting picked clean.
by
David ValenciaGiant Pacific Mantas are very friendly. This one was very social and stayed with us the entire dive.
by
David ValenciaA Giant Pacific Manta flies above the reef.
by
David ValenciaAn interesting take on a the bait of a baitball. These jacks swam to the shelter of the camera to avoid the demise of the rest in the background. Silky sharks and yellowfin tuna devoured the rest.
by
David ValenciaA Yellowfin Tuna was running from some false killer whales. The tuna was hiding under our arms and legs as the false killer whales swam circles around us.
by
Mark ThomasPacific bottlenose dolphins.
Isla san Benedicto.
by
Alejandro TopeteManta Ray Dance, San Benedicto Mexico
by
David ValenciaA floating board creates some open water refuge for these juvenile jacks. The Silky Sharks, Yellowfin Tuna, and Dolphins attacked this baitball.
by
David ValenciaSilky shark in the very early morning. As the water warms around Mexico's Revillagigedos, silky sharks become more prevalent.
by
Wolfgang ZwicknaglDiving with the giant Mantas of San Benedicto
by
Eric AddicottBottlenose Dolphin taken with Sony RX-100 at Socorro Islands.
by
Mark ThomasGiant Pacific Manta.
Revillagigedos Islands.
by
Craig Mcinally"Bubble Job" These resident giant mantas seek out divers and seem to enjoy the feel of bubbles.
by
Eric AddicottGiant Manta at The Boiler, San Benedicto Island, taken with Sony RX-100 compact, single strobe and wide-angle lens.
by
Steve LaycockLoving the bubbles , Manta at the Boiler
by
Lindsey Mobley2016 Socorro Islands.Beauty is in the eye of the beholder with this Giant Pacific Manta Ray. This is actually a screenshot that I got from one of my videos off of my PnS camera (TG-4)
by
Alejandro TopeteBird inside,Boiler San Benedicto México
by
Alejandro TopeteGiant Mantaray,Isla San Benedicto, México
by
Alejandro TopeteMantaray with Jacks, San Benedicto México
by
Alejandro TopeteBaby Silver Tip, San Benedicto Island México
by
Conor CulverCurious Silky Shark
by
Anne HedlundThe silkies surrounded our boat between dives, with the sun beautifully playing on their skin.
by
Jon AndersonAn octopus crawls along a rocky reef at the Canyon on Revillagigedo’s San Benedicto Island. With all the amazing shark, manta, and dolphin action here its hard to spend long looking at the reef but this beautiful octopus caught my eye!
by
Jon AndersonA male redtail triggerfish displays its vibrant colors and intricate textures at Mexico’s Revillagigedo Archipelago!
by
Jon AndersonCentrality
by
Alejandro TopeteDolphin with Divers and Jacks, San Benedicto Island México
by
Deniz Muzaffer Gökmensilver tip reef shark