If you’re a serious diver, you want to know what you
see in the deep. The only way is to take a good book with
you to identify the fish and study their behavior. But don’t
rely on your dive resort or liveaboard to have it on hand—
most stock a few dog-eared copies, but they may not be
current or complete, or else another guest may have taken
the book you need to his room.
Here are the best Caribbean and Pacific Coast ID
books to add to your reference library. I’m never without
these books when I travel to those sites, and I refer to them
when I write. You can find longer descriptions on our website
at www.undercurrent.org.
Buy these from Undercurrent by going to the book page
on www.undercurrent.org. You’ll get them for the price
currently listed on Amazon.com, although they are subject
to change. All the profits from book sales go directly to
programs that are saving coral reefs.
The Caribbean
The Reef Set: Reef Fish, Reef Creatures and Reef Coral, by Paul Humann and Ned Deloach. This three-volume set
is the unparalleled source for information on Caribbean
sea life and identification. Because so many species of
fish continually confuse divers with their variable colors
and markings, the Reef Fish Identification’s third edition
(512 pages) covers them all. The Reef Creatures book (488
pages) covers sponges, nudibranchs, octopus, crustaceans,
Christmas tree worms and more. The Reef Coral book
(252 pages) helps you identify all the hard and soft corals,
spawning, and even the growth on top of corals, as well as
algae and other plant life. Each book retails for $40, but
the boxed set is discounted by 37 percent. Hardcover with
shelf case, 7 x 10 inches, $75. Paperback with weatherresistant
canvas bag, 7 x 10 inches, $85.
A Guide to the Coral Reefs of the Caribbean, by Mark
D. Spalding. This book doubles as a guide to the natural
history of coral reefs and a diver’s travel guide. It covers 35 dive destinations with key information on reefs, marine
parks and remote places, and a photographic field guide of
the marine flora and fauna. Spalding, a coral reef scientist,
delves into eco-problems with a focus on what each person
can do to protect the reefs. Paperback, 7 x 10 inches,
$24.95.
Pacific Coast of Mexico and Central America
Fishes of the Tropical Eastern Pacific, by Gerald R.
Allen and D. Ross Robertson. The ultimate ID book
for the Baja, Costa Rica, the Galapagos and the Sea of
Cortez. Photo-packed pages cover 680 species of sharks
and sailfish, wrasses and razorfish, pipefish and pearlfish.
Sponsored by the Smithsonian Institute, Drs. Gerald
Allen and Ross Robertson’s definitive volume describes
and comments on these critters’ remarkable behaviors.
Hardbound, 8.8 x 11.5 inches, 332 pages, $85.
Sea of Cortez Marine Animals, by Daniel W. Gotshall.
The book you’ll need in order to identify critters anywhere
along Mexico’s Pacific Coast, all the way to Panama.
Gotshall, a marine biologist with 34 years’ research experience,
has more than 250 photos of fish, corals, nudibranchs,
lobsters, sea stars, and other critters endemic to these
waters. There are tips on how to identify each animal and
where to spot it. Paperback, 7 x 9 inches, 112 pages, $21.95.
Reef Fish Identification: Baja to Panama, by Paul
Humann and Ned Deloach. The latest edition in
Humann’s series of marine life books, and the most comprehensive
field guide for identifying reef fishes from
the Gulf of California to the Pacific coast of Panama,
including offshore islands. More than 500 photographs
of 400 species in their natural habitat. Each species’ portrait
includes the fish’s common, scientific and family
names, size range, description, visually distinctive features,
preferred habitat, typical behavior, depth range, and
geographical distribution. Paperback, 6.5 x 9 inches, 364
pages, $39.95.