Marine life
How shipwreck sites shape and sustain marine life in Sri Lanka's waters
Shipwrecks are more than archaeological time capsules. Once settled on the seabed, they become artificial reefs — hard surfaces that algae, corals, sponges, and invertebrates colonise, creating shelter and feeding grounds for fish and other marine life. Over years and decades, these structures develop into small but complex ecosystems within the wider ocean environment.
Around Sri Lanka, where more than a hundred wreck and aircraft sites are documented in the National Shipwreck Database, underwater investigations routinely record the species that inhabit or visit these structures. Linking marine biodiversity data with archaeological site records helps researchers understand how cultural heritage interacts with living ecosystems, and supports careful stewardship of protected underwater areas.
Browse the species catalogue below to explore fish, invertebrates, and other organisms associated with wreck sites in the database. Each profile includes scientific identification and, where available, the shipwrecks at which that species has been observed.
Species catalogue
Encounters from the deep — marine species identified on and around documented shipwreck sites, from reef fish and sponges to the invertebrates that thrive on submerged hulls.
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Giant trevally
Caranx ignobilis
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Glasseye
Heteropriacanthus cruentatus
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Goatsbeard brotula
Brotula multibarbata
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Gold-saddle goatfish
Parupeneus cyclostomus
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Gold-streaked prawn-goby
Ctenogobiops aurocingulus
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Goldband fusilier
Pterocaesio chrysozona
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Goldband goatfish
Upeneus moluccensis
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Goldbar wrasse
Thalassoma hebraicum
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Golden trevally
Gnathanodon speciosus
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Golden-lined spinefoot
Siganus lineatus
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Goldenstriped soapfish
Grammistes sexlineatus
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Goldlined seabream
Rhabdosargus sarba
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Goldstripe wrasse
Halichoeres zeylonicus
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Goldtail angelfish
Pomacanthus chrysurus
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Gon's cardinalfish
Archamia bleekeri
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Gray's pipefish
Halicampus grayi
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Greasy grouper
Epinephelus tauvina
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Greater lizardfish
Saurida tumbil
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Green jobfish
Aprion virescens
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Green puller
Chromis cinerascens
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Greenbubble dwarfgoby
Eviota prasina
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Grey bambooshark
Chiloscyllium griseum
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Grey demoiselle
Chrysiptera glauca
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Grey large-eye bream
Gymnocranius griseus