Many creatures, including fish, starfish, turtles, coral, sponges, jellyfish and lots of others, although I don't know whether dolphins live there.
The Great Barrier Reef
The Great Barrier Reef is home to a diverse range of marine life, including fish, coral, turtles, and rays. Some specific examples of animals that live near or on the reef are clownfish, humphead wrasse, and green sea turtles.
Dugong feed on seagrass, which grows in meadows through sheltered coastal waters. The Great Barrier Reef has some of the Australia's best seagrass beds, covering as much as 13% of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park area.
The Great Barrier Reef is home to approximately 1,500 species of fish, 400 types of coral, and a diverse range of marine animals, including sea turtles, dolphins, and sharks. It is estimated that about 10% of the world's marine species can be found within this ecosystem. This biodiversity makes the reef one of the most important marine environments globally.
Yes. Many species of jellyfish live in the Great Barrier Reef.
yes parrot fish do live in the great barrier reef.
Various marine creatures live in the Great Barrier Reef, including turtles, dugong, squid, octopus, sharks, a huge variety of fish, and an enormous range of sea plants.No person lives in the Great Barrier Reef, as it is primarily comprised of a series of coral reefs and atolls, and much of it is underwater. There are many islands which form part of the Great Barrier Reef, and these are inhabited by people of all sorts of races, usually caucasian.
Great Barrier Reef.
Not saltwater fish, but some freshwater animals/fish.
Sea birds lives on the Great Barrier reef.
Various marine creatures live in the Great Barrier Reef, including turtles, dugong, squid, octopus, sharks, a huge variety of fish, and an enormous range of sea plants. According to the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, there are about 1625 species of fish that live in and around the Great Barrier Reef, not including the shark species. Of these, 1400 are coral reef species. In addition, there are over 3000 species of molluscs, 630 species of echinoderm such as starfish and sea urchins, 14 known species of sea snakes, 30 species of whales and dolphins, dugongs and 133 species of sharks and rays.
Yes, large populations of dugong live in the Great Barrier Reef.