Arrecifes de Cozumel National Park
Mexico · Americas

About Arrecifes de Cozumel National Park
Arrecifes de Cozumel National Park is a protected marine ecosystem of the western and southern coastline of Cozumel in Quintana Roo. The park was established to protect coral reefs close to the island. The reefs are a part of the world's second-longest reef system, called the Mesoamerican Barrier Reef, that extends along the entire Mexican Caribbean and along much of the Central American coast. The Cozumel reefs offer countless underwater sights to delight snorkelers and scuba divers.
Arrecifes de Cozumel National Park travel guide
Understand
History The park was established as part of the Mexico national parks system in July 1996.
Landscape The park is an undersea landscape of coral reefs. The coral are small animals that build a shell as other organisms add calcium carbonate as they cling to the coral, creating a hard rock-like formation that provides habitat for a large variety of fish and other marine life, including sponges, mollusks and algae. Coral grows in warm, clear, tropical waters.
Flora and fauna
Climate
Getting there
The closest airport is Cozumel International Airport CZM IATA. It receives flights from most major Mexican cities and international flights from Houston (United Airlines) and Miami (American Airlines), among others. To get to the reef, you will need to find a dive boat with a certified divemaster. There are dozens of dive shops in Cozumel and larger resorts will often schedule their own dive trips to various sites on the reef.
Getting around
Dive boats can be hired in the town of San Miguel or at numerous resorts.
See
Walls - these are basically drop-offs where you can be in shallow water conditions of 30 feet and then suddenly the bottom drops out and you can be looking at a 120 or 150 foot depth requiring more advanced skills. Walls along the Cozumel reef include: Barracuda Wall, Eagle Ray Wall, and Villa Blanca Wall (which is very close to the cruise ship piers in San Miguel). There are a lot of sponges here including barrel sponge and basket sponge. Caves - There are countless caves along the length of the reef. The most popular spot for cave diving is Palancar Cave, an area that has more caves than you can dive in an entire week. This is an intermediate to advanced level dive with depths up to 120 feet. Wreck of the C-53 - The C-53 was a minesweeper in the Mexican Navy. It was decommissioned in 2000 and deliberately sunk off the western shore of Cozumel to provide an interesting sites for scuba divers. The 184 foot long ship is under 50-70 feet of water and requires intermediate diving skills. Bring a lamp so you can go inside the vessel. Coral reefs - the coral reefs are home to an amazing diversity of sea life including tropical fish, turtles, sharks, moray eels, eagle rays and more.
Eat
There is no place in the park to eat, unless you packed a lunch and have it on your dive boat. As you dive, you may see many fish and shellfish that would be tasty dinner entrees.
Drink & nightlife
No alcoholic beverages if you plan to dive.
Sleep
The island of Cozumel has dozens of excellent hotels.
Go next
Isla Mujeres - there are places you can snorkel with whale sharks Playa del Carmen - several nearby cenotes (sinkholes) offer cenote and underwater river dives for the clinically insane Xcalak- dive the Banco Chinchorro
Overview adapted from Wikipedia, travel guide fromWikivoyage (CC BY-SA)。Photography via Wikimedia Commons.