Reef manta ray
Mobula alfredi
Sighting evidence at Manta Alley, Komodo National Park

Photo: Luca Bertels · © all rights reserved
The smaller of the two manta species, with wingspans reaching up to 5 metres, reef mantas are filter-feeders tied to specific cleaning stations and feeding aggregation sites. Divers who approach cleaning stations — typically coral bommies swarming with wrasse — often witness mantas hovering motionless as cleaner fish pick parasites from their gills and skin. Cephalic fins — the horn-like lobes that give mantas their informal name — are used to funnel plankton-rich water into their mouths during feeding. Vulnerable; slow to reproduce and heavily targeted for gill plate in traditional medicine.
Evidence at this site
65 records within 25 km
Confidence: high