scubaseason

Grey reef shark

Carcharhinus amblyrhynchos

Sighting evidence at North Horn (Osprey Reef), Great Barrier Reef

One of the Indo-Pacific's most abundant reef sharks and a defining presence on healthy coral reefs. Grey reef sharks are mid-water patrollers, typically seen in small groups or alone along reef edges and drop-offs. They are curious rather than aggressive, often circling divers at a consistent distance. A distinctive threat display — arched back, depressed pectoral fins, exaggerated swimming — signals discomfort if divers approach too closely. Near threatened; their numbers have declined sharply in areas with intensive fishing.

Evidence at this site

130 records within 10 km

Confidence: high

How is this calculated?

Sighting evidence is compiled from iNaturalist observation records within a set proximity radius, filtered for quality-grade observations. “Last confirmed” is the date of the most recent research-grade record. Record count covers a rolling 24-month window. Confidence reflects record count, recency, and consistency of seasonal signal.

Also seen at other sites