Picture taken at 28 meters deep. This shark, in the early hours of the day, rising from the depths to the shoals, which forms the top of the seamount Monad Shoal, seeking the services of cleaning parasites, which perform two wrasses, which are abundant in this place Labroides dimidiatus and Thalassoma lunare. http://www.threshersharkproject.org/TSRCP/Research.html (Simon P. Oliver)
Picture taken at 28 meters deep. This shark, in the early hours of the day, rising from the depths to the shoals, which forms the top of the seamount Monad Shoal, seeking the services of cleaning parasites, which perform two wrasses, which are abundant in this place Labroides dimidiatus and Thalassoma lunare. http://www.threshersharkproject.org/TSRCP/Research.html (Simon P. Oliver)
And the final of the three; photo taken at Fly Point. Dwarf ornates are smaller (doh!) - about half the size as adults - and have more of a plain but freckled face than banded and spotted wobbys.