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Red Sea Reef Guide
Red Sea Reef Guide

Hardcover
Author: Helmut Debelius
Publisher: Circle Publishing
Release Date: September 2000
ISBN-10: 0953891909
ISBN-13: 9780953891900
List Price: £25.45
Average Customer Rating:
Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0
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Customer Reviews
Average Customer Rating: Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0

Good book.
Customer Rating:  Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4
Before going to the Red sea, I read good reviews on this book, and so bought it. I found it extremly useful. I was going to the Red sea for the first time, and I cant think of any fish that I saw and was not shown in the book. The down side is the index at the end.Say you want to look for a Grouper, and you are not sure of its type, then ideally the index should be listed as
Grouper, marbled.
Grouper, peacock
Grouper, Potato etc .
However in the book its listed with all the first adjectives of the fish name, which makes it difficult to use the index.
Also it is difficult to know why the fish groups are sequenced in the perticular way. Unless you are a Marine Biology student, all the scientific approach of listing doesnt help.
I would have rather listed the fish as 'Mainly Red' 'Yellow' , 'mainly yellow' etc which would make it easier to use!
The info about the formation of the red sea is very useful, given at the begining of the book.
Since it was my 1st trip, I was too usy watching the fish, and so I havent really studied the corals! I therefore dont know if its the best book to see corals in the red sea.
The book devotes many pages to molluscs which are not really seen that often.
All in all I think its a very good purchase. I must also add that all my instructors too were using the same book for their own refernce.


Err, what was that fish???
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
I've been to the Red Sea about 10 times now and bought this book about 7 years ago after I saw a copy of it on a boat. This is THE book to buy if you're interested in fish id. The biggest problem I have is trying to find it when I take it on trips - everyone wants to borrow it!!! Yep, it's quite expensive, but it is simply is the best fish id book for the Red Sea!

A must have book
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
I bought this book after my first diving holiday in Egypt.

The outfit we were diving with had supplied a copy for use on the book, and I spent so much time looking through it trying to identify what I had just seen that I knew I had to get my own copy.

My copy now travels with me on all my trips to Egypt, although I rairly get chance to look at it myself as everyone else on the boat is borrowing it!!

Essential SCUBA dive gear!
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
For a fresh amateur SCUBA diver the variety of fish life in the Red Sea is all but numbing the senses. But soon enough you see there is some logic to the Darwinian evolutionary madness, and you want to know what all those fish really are - that's when you start looking for field guides. Having bought, and quickly forgotten, several I finally found this one, which has since stayed a true and trusted travel companion to Egypt.

Debelius Red Sea Reef Guide (and indeed its sibling covering the Indian Ocean) has several real strengths and no significant drawbacks - except perhaps weight, 0.9 kg is just more than marginal if you want to travel light, and the indices, more on that later.

The choice of species included is accurate - unlike some other guides, you have a good chance of finding what you are looking for. Most of the species are fish (including sharks and rays), but also arthropods (shrimps, lobsters), molluscs, flatworms, corals, sea stars, sea urchins, reptiles and a few mammals are covered to a degree, though far from fully. Naturally they are all sorted according to families and species. All in all something like 800 - 900 species.

The photos are crisp and clear, portraying the specimens in a way so you can recognize them. A small number of photos are full page, but the majority are appr 9X6 cm (three descriptions to a page) with a few additional smaller ones illustrating varieties.

The descriptions are generelly brief, of course, but well written. Scientific names are always included.

Spread through the book are about a dozen "picture stories", 1 - 3 pages each on subjects such as "To eat or to be eaten", "Stinging protectors" and "Acid attack by night".

The book is structured according to scientific classification. The table of contents is clear, using colours to visually delineate similar groups - even if this makes parts of the table somewhat hard to read.

At the end are two alphabetic indices, one for scientific names and one for common names, and here is my one real source of gripe about the book. The indices are set in a very small and condensed type face, making them really hard to read unless you have perfect eye sight. The index on common names is not as complete as it should be, listing only the exact name but not parts or permutations of it (e.g. "Crowned toby", but never "toby"; "Common cleaner wrasse", but not "cleaner wrasse" which you would probably be searching for). Also, common names are not so common as one might think - several fish are known under two, some even three, english "common" names in the world - Debelius only ever lists one.

To sum it up: weight and indices are very minor drawbacks, I simply will not leave this guide at home when heading for Red Sea diving!


A must for red sea visitors
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
I bought this book upon returning from my second dive trip to the Red Sea - I wish I'd bought it before my first! The good quality photographs make it really easy to identify all that you've seen on your dives and there are interesting facts & stories dotted in between the references which make good reading.

























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