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Diving in the Fijian islands and Tonga

This amazing underwater footage was shot whilst scuba diving in the Fijian islands and Tonga. It’s really quite a site to behold, showcasing everything from colourful coral reefs, huge schools of tropical fish, sharks, humpback whales, underwater caves and scuba divers to much more marine life from the south Pacific.
YouTube video
The coral reefs of the south Pacific are alive with a huge variety of tropical fish and marine critters. A great way to explore them is to scuba dive with the Nai’a liveaboard based in Fiji. The videographer was working as the Nai’a’s promotional video when he shot this footage. Here is the full shot list of species and dive sites. You can find more complete information here. 0:04 – “E6”, Bligh Water, Fiji 0:06 – Reticulated Dascyllus at “Maytag” 0:09 – “Mushrooms”, Namena Marine Reserve 0:11 – “Coral Corner” 0:13 – “Maytag” 0:15 – “Coral Corner” 0:17 – “Mellow Yellow” 0:20 – “E6” 0:22 – Chironephthya corals at “Mount Mutiny” 0:24 – Cave at “Lion’s Den” near Wakaya Island 0:28 – Chironephthya corals at “The Whole Shebang” 0:31 – “The Whole Shebang” 0:33 – “Mellow Yellow” 0:35 – “E6” 0:37 – “Kansas” at North Save-a-Tack 0:39 – Lyretail anthias at “Howard’s Diner” 0:43 – “Maytag” 0:45 – Banded sea krait at “Jim’s Alley” near Gau Island 0:52 – Pacific sailfin tang 0:54 – Button polyps at “Humann Nature” 0:56 – Urn ascidians at “Becky’s” near Makogai Island 0:59 – Pom pom Xenia 1:03 – Barberi clownfish 1:05 – Barberi clownfish at “Cat’s Meow” 1:07 – Barberi clownfish 1:11 – Pink anemonefish 1:13 – Blueband gobies 1:16 – Firefish at Lua Lafalafa Reef, Tonga 1:18 – Orbicular batfish 1:20 – Teira batfish over the “Nasi Yalodina” wreck 1:22 – Elongate surgeonfish 1:24 – Blackfin barracuda 1:27 – Bigeye trevallies at “Grand Central Station” 1:29 – Schooling bannerfish at “School House” 1:31 – Pacific double-saddle butterflyfish 1:33 – Blue and gold fusiliers over yellow scroll coral at Nigali Passage 1:35 – Barcheek trevally at “Tetons” 1:37 – Golden damsel & bluestreak cleaner wrasse 1:40 – Blue and gold fusilier and bluestreak cleaner wrasse 1:42 – Sunburst anthias at “Palako’s Patch” 1:44 – Speckled damsel spawning at Uoleva Point 1:46 – Arc-eye hawkfish at “Anthias Avenue” 1:38 – Longsnout flathead at Luangahu Reef 1:51 – Ribbon eel at “Tetons” 1:53 – Giant moray 1:55 – Juvenile rockmover wrasse at “Two Thumbs Up” 1:57 – Firefish 2:00 – Red lionfish 2:02 – Whitetip reef shark under “Kansas” 2:04 – Grey reef shark 2:10 – Sinularia corals 2:12 – Blue-spotted puffer 2:15 – Blackspotted puffer at Ha’afeva Island, Tonga 2:17 – Blue-green Chromis 2:21 – Red lionfish 2:23 – Zebra lionfish at Luangahu Reef 2:28 – Coral grouper at “Becky’s” 2:30 – Dwarf hawkfish 2:32 – Scorpionfish 2:34 – Randall’s prawn-goby 2:36 – Signalfin goby 2:39 – Gorgeous prawn goby & snapping shrimp 2:41 – Weedy pygmy seahorse 2:43 – Ornate ghost pipefish 2:47 – Ornate ghost pipefish eggs in brooding pouch 2:50 – Christmas tree worm 2:53 – Manta ray at Vatu Vai 2:58 – Hawksbill turtle 3:03 – Humpback whale mother and calf at Ha’apai, Tonga 3:10 – Malabar grouper 3:15 – Honeycomb coral 3:19 – “Lion’s Den” 3:21 – “Mushrooms” 3:23 – “Coral Corner” 3:25 – “Mushrooms” 3:28 – Whitemargin unicornfish 3:30 – Dendronephthya soft coral 3:32 – Bigeye barracuda 3:35 – “Gomo” 3:39 – “Nasi Yalodina” wreck 3:41 – “E6” 3:43 – Lance blenny 3:45 – Triplespot blenny 3:48 – Valentini puffer 3:50 – Parrotfish at Nukupule 3:52 – Bluespotted ribbontail ray 3:54 – Blotched fantail ray at Ha’afeva Island 3:56 – Orange mantis shrimp 3:59 – Sexy shrimp 4:01 – Day octopus 4:04 – Fuchsia flatworms mating 4:07 – Bullock’s Hypselodoris 4:09 – Spanish dancer 4:14 – Spanish dancer at Ha’afeva Island 4:18 – Brown booby at Vatu-i-ra Dakuwaqa is a shark-god from Fijian mythology.

Paul Johnson

Paul Johnson is Editor of A Luxury Travel Blog and has worked in the travel industry for more than 30 years. He is Winner of the Innovations in Travel ‘Best Travel Influencer’ Award from WIRED magazine. In addition to other awards, the blog has also been voted “one of the world’s best travel blogs” and “best for luxury” by The Daily Telegraph.

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One Comment

  1. Thank you for sharing this video! I am glad that with your help I discovered Nick Hope’s underwater photography as I have a particular soft spot for it and enjoy exploring our own reef in Kenya myself. It was also interesting to compare what we see here with what was on various videos of Nick’s from Indo-Pacific. We have a lot in common but there were a lot of new things too.

    We have an amazing reef and a lagoon right outside our hotel and it is great that even people who never snorkelled in their lives or who are not good swimmers enjoy the experience. Our lagoon is shallow at the low tide when we take our guests there, and snorkelling is easy. Diving in Kenya is also enjoyable and I personally had the pleasure of diving with whale sharks on a number of occasions – majestic creatures, humbling experience! Marine life is my passion and it is fantastic that I have the opportunity to do what I love!

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