Big Island Snorkling Tours Blog

WHY YOU SHOULD NEVER EVER TOUCH A MANTA RAY

Manta Rays underwater

Snorkeling with Manta Rays is an amazing experience.  Join us on the Hoku Nui to go out to Manta Ray Village and get up close and personal with the graceful and majestic manta rays – but don’t touch.  Martina Wing for Manta Ray Advocates on why it’s important not to touch the beautiful and friendly manta rays.

One of the most frequently asked questions we get is “Can we touch the mantas?” and the short answer is NO.

Let’s dive a bit deeper into why touching a manta ray is a bad idea for so many reasons…

TOUCHING MANTA RAYS CAN STARTLE THEM

The first reason to not touch a manta ray is pretty straightforward: these are wild animals, and they’re not used to being touched by humans.

Although mantas are incredibly relaxed and have a magical effect on people who swim with them (we don’t call them “gentle giants of the sea” for nothing!), when they’re startled they could inadvertently swim into corals (damaging them) or other divers and snorkelers (potentially hurting them).

WHEN YOU TOUCH A MANTA RAY, YOU DAMAGE THEIR COATING

Have you ever touched a fish? And we don’t mean the ones that are already prepared in Sushi or “fish and chips”- LOL.

Fish feel slimy because of a mucus coating which makes it hard to hold and easily slip through the fingers.

Manta rays are fish, and as such, they have this same slime coating on their bodies. The coating protects them from bacteria and if it gets removed, it can expose the manta to infections.

Touching a manta ray means touching the coating – and in most cases, that results in damage to the coating… and exposing them to all the things that coating usually protects them from.

As a general rule, our belief is that humans should not touch anything that lives in the ocean – dolphins, turtles, coral, etc.

The usual follow-up question is:

WHY DO MANTAS HAVE RED SORES ON THEIR UNDERBELLY?

Yes, some manta rays have red sores (or abrasions) on their underbelly, more specifically on their cephalic fins.

There may be two potential reasons for these abrasions:

  1. Natural causes: they may have rubbed against rock or coral or got hurt a bit during a mating ritual…
  2. Human impact: humans attempted to touch them.

OTHER WAYS IN WHICH MANTA RAYS GET HURT

We have also seen Manta Rays with black spiny sea urchins sticking out of their body (mouth or cephalic fins), which would indicate that they get too close to the reef and seem to run into “stuff” and contributes naturally to lose the protective coating.

Who would have thought mantas are clumsy? 🙂

The good news is that they survive even with the redness and abrasions but it does not mean humans should touch the mantas.

When we take guests snorkeling with manta rays, many of the Kona mantas come very close to participants.

Our philosophy is to enter their environment as guests showing respect, appreciation and to DO NO HARM!

 

 

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