click on the link to see the photos, absolutely gorgeous animal! Hope it doesn't end up being killed for its fins 
Pictured: A majestic rare albino whale shark graces the ocean | Mail Online
Pictured: A majestic rare albino whale shark graces the ocean | Mail Online
Sometimes, Nature puts on a show that leaves Man awestruck.
Divers were stunned by the sight of a 33ft albino whale shark as it glided through the waters off the coast of Darwin, an island in the Galapagos group.
The female whale shark, believed to be the only one of its kind, was first spotted by diver and naturalist Antonio Moreano in the Galapagos islands when he took a group of tourists on a nature cruise.
Antonio knew he had to get up close and personal with the placid creature and see the whale shark in its own domain.
‘It was 4:30pm and I and six guests were at Darwin’s Island, set to make the fourth dive of the day,’ said Mr Moreano, who hails from the Puerto Ayora-Galapagos.
‘As we were on the boat checking our equipment I saw a big white thing by the surface of the water.
‘At the beginning I could not tell what it was - i had never seen anything like it before.
‘So I decided to put my mask on and put my face over into the water.
‘Right after this I explained to my guests that it looked like a white whale shark and we were going to all jump in the water and try to follow it.
‘I told everyone to keep a distance and not disturb it so we all jumped in the water and followed it for five minutes.'
Mr Moreano dived to around 50 feet as he attempted to catch up with the whale shark.
‘I free dove 50ft down and is when I finally managed to get some pictures of it,’ he explained.
‘It was difficult because I did not want to frighten it away so I stayed a few metres away.
‘After a few minutes the albino disappeared and nobody has ever seen it again!
‘The whole experience from the moment I first saw it to the time it swam away lasted around 30 minutes.
‘I was very excited but it was not until we came back to the boat that I finally realised and understood how special this sighting was.
‘I realised it was a unique experience and was maybe the best gift that my beautiful islands could”ve ever given to me.
‘I kept up swimming with it and I got very close - even the eye was white.
From the size and shape of its fins, Mr Moreano identified the albino animal as a female.
‘All whale sharks found in Darwin’s Arch are big fat females, we have never seen a male or at least I haven’t,’ he said.
‘There is big mystery about our whale shakes: they all show up at Darwin and Wolf from June until November and they all go in circles around the arch dive sites.
‘Sometimes we have seen like five of them together but never seen one with mouth wide open neither males and the smallest whale shark we have seen is probably nine to 12ft.
‘But no-one has seen this albino whale shark since.’
Antonio works for M/V Deep Blue is a licensed Tour operating Company and yacht agency authorised by the Ecuadorian Navy, to guide private yachts around the protected areas of the Galapagos.
‘Our job is to arrange everything for Captain, owners and crew,’ he explains.
‘Some of our clients are among the richest people in the world. We are also arranging trips for these type of yachts for Cocos Island, Malpel Island from Colombia.
‘I am now organising dive and naturalist trips to the Galapagos but trips with a special interest.
‘I know my islands quite well and want to make completely different trips as well as now organise trips for private yachts that would like to visit Galapagos Cocos, Mlapelo as well as in the future Antarctica.’
The whale shark is the largest known fish and can measure between 50 to 60ft in length and up to 10 tons in weight.
Usually a blend of blue sprinkled with white spots, the whale shark ranges all tropical waters, it is considered to be harmless to humans.
Scuba divers and underwater swimmers have clambered unmolested over its body.
The whale shark feeds chiefly on plankton, but also consumes sardines and anchovies.