Tag Archives: manta rays

The Beautiful Manta Ray

The Manta Ray Frenzy

Maupiti has a popular snorkeling and diving spot where you can see manta rays.  There is a “cleaning station” where the manta rays go each day between 0900-1100.  We were blessed enough to visit several times during our stay in Maupiti. 

Did you know there are two types of manta rays?  The larger species (biostris) reaches 7 meters (23’) in width while the smaller (M. Alfredis) reaches 5.5 meters (18’).  Both have triangular pectoral fins and large cephalic lobes, and forward-facing mouths.  They can be found in warm, temperate, tropical waters. 

The photos aren’t the best as I’m 10 meters above them and it was cloudy, but you can still tell they are amazing creatures.

How and What they Eat

Mantas are filter feeders and eat large quantities of plankton which they gather with their mouths open as they swim.  The large cephalic lobes help funnel food into its mouth while it swims.  The photos below show you their cephalic lobes in front of their mouth

Manta Rays and their cephalic lobes

Manta Rays and their cephalic lobes

Cleaning Stations

Mantas visit “cleaning stations” for the removal of parasites. A cleaning station is a large coral head populated with a variety of fish and coral.  The manta will visit the cleaning station to have the fish swim in and out of its gills and mouth collecting parasites.

When we visited, we were able to watch several mantas come and go in an orderly fashion.  It was fascinating and beautiful.

The unfortunate thing is that not all visitors know how to act around manta rays.  We watched several tourists do horrifying things like climbing on the cleaning station, chasing the mantas, and trying to touch them.  The manta rays have been scared away before and frequent the cleaning station less and less.  So, I partnered with the Maupiti Dive Center and Manta Trust in French Polynesia  to help spread the word on how to swim with mantas.

Mating

Female mantas are not considered mature (breeding age) until they are 8-10 years old.  Manta Rays give birth to 1-2 “live pups” (as opposed to laying their eggs), once every two to five years check out mantaray-world.com for more information on manta reproduction.

The male will casually wander around the cleaning stations looking for a willing female.  The females will omit sex hormones in the water to communicate its willingness to mate.  Courting can take up to several weeks and can create “train mating.” A train mating is when up to 25-30 males, arranged one behind the other, follow the female’s movements as she leads them all.  At the end of this test, the female chooses a male and it bites its partner’s left pectoral fin to hold her. Then it positions itself so that bellies of both are bonded, and inserts one of its claspers in the female cloaca. The coupling lasts several seconds and usually the female stands still. After mating the male goes away and never returns to take part in parental care

Fun Facts:

  1. Giant manta rays are the largest rays in the world with wingspans up to 29 feet (8.8 m) wide and weights up to 5,300 pounds (2,404 kg).
  2. Manta rays are the only vertebrate animals with three paired appendages: two wing-like pectoral fins; two sets of gills; and two lobes that extend from the mouth and funnel in water.
  3. A manta ray will sometimes do somersaults (barrel rolls) while feeding to maximize their prey intake.
  4. Giant manta rays can dive more than 3,280 feet (1,000 m) underwater, but typically feed only 33 feet (10 m) deep.
  5. The life span of a manta ray is upt 40 years.
  6. Giant manta rays have the biggest brains of any fish studied so far. They use that brain power to learn, exercise their memory, distinguish between objects and even recognize themselves in the mirror.

It is hard to show just how big and magical these creatures are, but here is a photo with a diver just below the manta on the right.  It is hard to see because I am snorkeling 12 meters above them and the water clarity was pretty bad, but you get the idea.

Photos from our manta ray encounter in Tahanea while swimming in the pass.

Manta Rays in Tahanea

Manta Rays in Tahanea

Come back, I am not done playing with you

Come back, I am not done playing with you

Looks like they want to eat me, but they just like plankton

Looks like they want to eat me, but they just like plankton

A spotted ray playing with the manta rays.  He looks like a bird under water.

This post was written in August 2020.  Our blog posts are usually 6 to 7 weeks behind are true adventures.  

Tahanea Anchorage with Easy and Rhapsody

Exquisite Tahanea

Tahanea is an uninhabited atoll known for its active passes teaming with manta rays, sharks, large fish, and beautiful coral.  Many of our cruising friends proclaimed this to be their favorite spot in all of French Polynesia.  We were looking forward to experiencing this rare beauty for ourselves. 

This atoll is considered uninhabited. However, locals come four months out of the year to harvest copra and one man lives here as the “guardian.”  During our visit, only the guardian was on hand.

We were in need of some fun after our productive day of repairing the port shifter cable and windlass remote.  Matt and I went exploring on one of the close motus.  It was low tide which meant we could walk out to the reef.  Most of the motus are covered in broken coral and shells with very little sandy areas. But we had fun walking around and found a ton of eels hiding under rocks in less than 3” of water!

Tahanea Motu in all its beauty

Tahanea Motu in all its beauty

Happy hour on Sugar Shack

We invited our friends on Rhapsody (Ada and John), Easy (Mike), and Imani (Doreen and Mark) over for happy hour.  We had tons of tuna and wanted to share.  Mike came over to help us clean the fish.  We had some great fun feeding the left overs to the sharks off the back of the boat.

Sharks eating our tuna leftovers

Sharks eating our tuna leftovers

We’ve had some rain storms.  But, after each one we were rewarded with rainbows.  The top photo is Rhapsody and the bottom is Easy.

Rainbows of Tahanea

Rainbows of Tahanea

The wind has been squirrely.  Sometimes we have no wind and our floats bunched together.  Which is not good for scope.  The proper way the floats should be all in one line (top photo).  The bottom shows them all bunched up.

Crazy floats not always doing their job

Crazy floats not always doing their job

Manta Rays:

We gathered the troops (Rhapsody and Easy) and headed to snorkel the pass which is known to have Manta Rays.  There was a light incoming current as we drifted from the sea into the lagoon.  It was brimming with beautiful coral, fish, and sharks.  We were on the hunt for manta rays.  After an hour, we headed to the other side of the pass.  Still no luck. We had been out for about 90 minutes and were a little pruny.  Just as we were organizing everything in the dinghy, we spotted a manta ray – the hunt was on! 

The manta rays use the pass to feed on plankton.  They open their expansive mouths, collect their food, and glide away.  Their fins or wings are so powerful that they create a stream of light bubbles off the tips (bottom photo).  It was so amazing I nearly cried.

Manta Rays in Tahanea

Manta Rays in Tahanea

These were not ginormous, but they were huge creatures.  It’s as if I could swim into the valley of their mouth and be swallowed hole.

Looks like they want to eat me, but they just like plankton

Looks like they want to eat me, but they just like plankton

The manta rays are curious and swim close to you, but then turn away as they had business to attend to – feeding.

Come back, I am not done playing with you

Come back, I am not done playing with you

It was truly a magical and mystical experience for me.  These creatures are majestic and so smooth as they casually fly through the sea.  I will always remember this amazing experience!

Maiden Drone Voyage

Matt has tried and tried and tried to fly the new drone.  Unfortunately for us they have no instructions.  Believe it or not, they send you to YouTube to watch instructional videos.  All sounds good until you don’t have wifi!  Lucky for us, Matt was able to download a few videos before we left the wifi zone.  Then we could not fly it because we were in no-fly zones (near airports) in Rangiroa and Fakarava.  Seriously?  Finally, we arrive in Tahanea with no airports, no wind, and space to take the maiden voyage.

Lots of controls on the game boy type remote.  Matt did a great job for his first time out.  Can’t wait until he gets better, smoother, and in more control.  Stay tuned for more great aerial shots!

Sugar Shack floating above the water

Sugar Shack floating above the water

The beauty of Tahanea from the sky

The beauty of Tahanea from the sky

Rock Art

We grabbed Mike and went to explore another motu off Tahanea.  It is located near the middle pass which we used to enter the lagoon.  We had seen some beautiful rock towers and wanted to check them out.  Mike and Matt in dink and on shore working on flying the drone.

Matt and Mike flying the drone

Matt and Mike flying the drone

Some people, most likely cruisers have been busy!  Can you see what is hidden in the top photo?

Rock art on Tahanea

Rock art on Tahanea

Our friends on Rhapsody took this amazing photo of Sugar Shack at sunset.  No wind, still, and breathless.

Sugar Shack Magestic Shot

Sugar Shack Magestic Shot

New Friends on Imani

We met some new friends on a boat called “Imani.”  Doreen and Mark have raised their two kids and lived on the boat for the past 25 years.  Mark is an artist and jeweler and graciously invited us over to look at his work. He converted one of the hulls into a workshop that had a buffer and metal press to create all sorts of amazing jewelry.  You can check out and order his work on etsy (etsy.com/marcgounard/shop).

Imani's jewelry work shop

Imani’s jewelry work shop

His jewelry is incredibly unique and one of a kind.  He works with stones, gems, pearls, metal and more.

Rhapsody, Imani, and Easy all decided to head to Makemo while Matt and I stayed in Tahanea but went to a different anchorage.  We hope to meet up with them on one of the northern atolls or the Marquesas.  We motor sailed the 7nm to the “7” anchorage.  This spot got its name because it looks like a “7” from the Google Earth imagery.

The 7 Anchorage in Tahanea

The 7 Anchorage in Tahanea

Boobies!

What an incredibly peaceful and serene spot.  We dropped the hook in 3 meters of sandy water and did not have to use the floats!  Thank goodness.  What a striking spot.  Turquoise waters, small islets covered in towering palm trees and a large variety of birds.  We explored the two small motus and admired all the beautiful birds. 

Motus in Tahanea

Motus in Tahanea

Brown boobies, red boobies, sandpipers and more make this atoll home.

Boobies in Tahanea

Boobies in Tahanea

I loved capturing these birds in flight.  The contrast of their translucent white wings against the blue sky was striking.

Beautiful bird sanctuary of Tahanea

Beautiful bird sanctuary of Tahanea

We found another motu at the “C” anchorage that had lots and lots of babies.  The red boobies (with red feet) nest in the low trees whereas the blue boobies (blue feet) nest on the ground.

Mama red foot boobie with her fluffy baby

Baby boobies

Baby boobies

This is a juvenile blue foot boobie who has yet to lose its fluffy baby feathers

Teenager boobies

Teenager boobies

We found lots of babies, both red and blue foot boobies – they are all fuzzy white and so cute.  We even found some eggs in a nest on the ground.

Baby boobies

Baby boobies

Its so funny to see these young palm trees.  The coconuts fall off trees, go into the ocean and land on the shores.  Then the start to grow and eventually plant themselves.  These young trees all planted where they landed.

Palm trees growing from lost coconuts

Palm trees growing from lost coconuts

Sugar Shack at the “7” anchorage sitting pretty and owning it.

Sugar Shack

Sugar Shack