Giant Oceanic Manta Ray
Manta birostris
The giant oceanic manta ray (Manta birostris) is the largest manta ray, a wide-winged filter feeder that ranges through tropical and subtropical oceans. It has triangular pectoral fins, cephalic lobes that help guide plankton-rich water toward the mouth, and a dark upper surface that may carry individual markings useful for identification. Oceanic mantas visit cleaning stations, feed in plankton blooms, and move across large marine areas rather than staying on a single reef.
Human care is almost entirely conservation and research, since very few facilities can support rays of this size. Field teams use photo identification, tagging, plankton surveys, and cleaning-station monitoring to understand movements and population structure. Major concerns include gill-plate trade, bycatch, boat strikes, entanglement, and loss of feeding or cleaning habitats. Dive tourism can help fund protection when operators control approach distance, touching, bubbles, and crowding. Rehabilitation is rare and difficult because the animal needs vast, clean, open water and specialized handling.
Colors: Wild Type