Caribbean reef shark
Carcharhinus perezi
Sighting evidence at Pipin, Jardines de la Reina
The dominant large shark on Caribbean coral reefs, characterised by a stocky build and rounded snout. Caribbean reef sharks patrol reef edges and drop-offs, often in loose groups, and are the species most commonly encountered in Caribbean shark dives. They are opportunistic predators of fish and cephalopods, and play a critical top-down regulatory role on the reef. Near threatened; heavily fished for fins and meat across their range. At sites with dive tourism value, local protection has allowed populations to partially recover.
Evidence at this site
130 records within 10 km
Confidence: high