Bunaken is an island of 8 km², part of
the Bunaken
National Marine Park. Bunaken is
located at the northern tip of the island of Sulawesi, Indonesia. It belongs administratively to the
municipality of Manado. Scuba diving attracts many visitors to the
island.
Bunaken
National Park extends over an area of 890.65 km² of which only 3% is
terrestrial, including Bunaken Island, as well as the islands of Manado Tua, Mantehage, Nain and Siladen.
The waters
of Bunaken National Marine Park are up to 1,566 m deep in Manado Bay, with temperatures ranging between
27 to 29 °C. It has a high diversity of - corals, fish, echinoderms or sponges. Notably, 7 of the 8
species of giant clams that occur in the world, occur in Bunaken. It also
claims to have seven times more genera of coral than Hawaii,[1] and has more than 70% of all the
known fish species of the Indo-Western Pacific.[2]
Oceanic
currents may explain, in part, why Bunaken National Marine Park has such a high
level of biodiversity. Northeasternly currents generally sweep through the park
but abundant counter currents and gyros related to lunar cycles are believed to be a trap for free
swimming larvae. This is particularly true on the south side of the
crescent-shaped Bunaken Island, lying in the heart of the park. A snorkeler or diver in the vicinity of Lekuan
or Fukui may spot over 33 species of butterfly fish and numerous types
of groupers, damsels, wrasses and gobies. The gobies, smallish fish with bulging eyes and
modified fins that allow them to attach to hard surfaces, are the most diverse
but least known group of fish in the park.
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