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Plonger à Raja Ampat - Indonésie Populaire

 
Région de plongée : Indonesia - Raja Ampat - Voir la carte Plonger à Raja Ampat - Indonésie

Meilleure saison pour plonger : Janvier  •  Février  •  Mars  •  Avril  •  Mai  •  Juin  •  Juillet  •  Aout  •  Septembre  •  Octobre  •  Novembre  •  Décembre
Nombre de jours recommendés sur place : Plus d'une semaine
Nombre de sites de plongée : Plus de 20 Sites
Température de l'eau et combinaison adéquate : 26C-… : Combinaison courte ou fine
Visibilité en moyenne : 16 - 20 mètres
Profondeur moyenne des plongées : 25 Mètres
Type de courant : Courants de force moyenne
Mois de présence des courants : Year round
Conditions générales de surface : Conditions moyennes
Types d'épave : Navires de guerre
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Type de vie marine : Anémone  •  Barracuda  •  Coraux  •  Ecrevisse  •  Seiche  •  Dauphins  •  Dugong  •  Mérou  •  Carangues  •  Méduse  •  Homard  •  Murènes  •  Nudibranches (invertébrés)  •  Pieuvres/poulpes  •  Plantes  •  Raies  •  Poissons de récif  •  Serpents de mer  •  Oursins  •  Hippocampes  •  Requins gris  •  Requins de récif  •  Crevettes  •  Corail mou  •  Eponges  •  Calmar  •  Etoiles de mer  •  Thons  •  Tortues  •  Baleines  •  Vers
Présence de grottes ou cavernes sous-marines : Oui - Ouverte

Description

The Raja Ampat translates as 'four kings', and describes the four groups of islands around the Bird's Head Peninsula of West Papua in Indonesia: Waigeo in the North, Batanta, Salawati and Misool to the South.

The Bird's Head Peninsula forms the north-western end of the island of New Guinea. To the east is Cenderawasih Bay and to the south Bintuni Bay. To the west, across the Dampier Strait is Waigeo island of Raja Ampat, and Batanta island lies just off the northwest tip. The peninsula south is Bomberai Peninsula. The peninsula is around 200 by 300 kilometres, and is bio-geographically diverse, containing coastal plains to the south. The Arfak Mountains are a 3000 metre high mountain range that are found in the east. Slightly shorter than the Arfak Mountains, the Tamrau Mountains are found in the north. Bon Irau, a 2420 meter high mountain, is found in the Tamrau Mountains and is the highest mountain. The highest mountain on the Bird's Head Peninsula is Pegunungan Arfak. It is 2920 meters high and is located 24 miles southwest of Manokwari The Landscape of Raja Ampat In an area roughly 50 000sq km, the Raja Ampat comprises a unique labyrinth of more than 1200 islands and rocky outcrops which protrude from calm, turquoise water. The karst topography is characterised by mushroom islands, cones, caves, fissures and ridges, eroded by winds and tides over time. The limestone islands are covered with lush rain forest right down to the water's edge. The Inhabitants of Raja Ampat Surrounded by tranquility and nourished by fish and sago palms, the people of this remote archipelago have been living apart from the world for half an eternity. It is a world sparsely populated by humans, a mere 35 000 people live in widely scattered coastal villages.
The area is a fascinating melange of natural wonders, both above and below the water. The Marine Life of Raja Ampat The Raja Ampat is deemed a species factory for marine life, with scientists proclaiming the bountiful reefs the baseline against which all reefs on Earth should be measured. These are the world's richest reefs, home to 75% of all known coral species, 1459 species of reef fish and counting. Continuously discovering new species,including sharks, shrimp and reef building coral, scientists confirm this region as the Earth's richest seascape. Conservation is active in Marine Protected Areas throughout the Raja Ampat, and in addition, the area around Pulau Pef specifically is also protected by a no-take zone. The Raja Ampat is not only about diversity of species, but also of habitats. Colourful soft and hard coral gardens, walls and slopes, sea-grass beds, blue water mangroves, caves and caverns, muck critters, adrenalin filled drift dives, glass calm water, wrecks, jelly fish bays and superbly fishy reefs. From giant Manta rays, to tiny Pygmy seahorses, the Raja Ampat has it all!  
Raja4Divers for WorldDivingReview.

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