Intertidal and offshore pinnacle at Ten Mile State Marine Reserve, Mendocino County, CA, Jan 2015. |
Friday was a bright sunny
winter day on the northern California
coast. I went tidepooling at Ten Mile State Marine Reserve a few miles
north of Fort Bragg
in Mendocino County . I discovered this site years ago
and named it site 71.70 from the mile marker for nearby state highway 1. In 2012, this area was incorporated into a state marine reserve. Access to
the intertidal is down a hundred foot coastal bluff which is impossible in most
places except for a steep thin trail that leads down loose soil and rocks. It isn’t
the easiest trail, but it isn’t particularly harrowing either if one is
careful.
Left: Intertidal Postelsia population in summer 2008. Right: Jewel top snail, 2015. |
One of the most striking plants I observed today was Codium setchellii, a dark green (almost black), seaweed of velvet texture that spreads over rocks in the lower to mid-intertidal zone. It is sister to another green seaweed, Codium fragile, that has the popular name of “dead-man’s fingers” because of its cylindrical dark green branches. Instead of morbid appendages hanging pendant on the rocks, however, C. setchellii grasps the substrate with crenulations that aren’t too dissimilar to a human brain. I think therefore, in honor of its relative, an appropriate common name for this plant is “dead man’s brains”.
Codium setchellii, aka "dead man's brains"! |
This tidepooling trip was
also the maiden voyage for a new “action” video camera I purchased. I’ll need
to practice the underwater techniques in the future, but I’ve included a short video of some
tidepool footage.
Looking north at Ten Mile State Marine Reserve from the coastal bluffs, Jan 2015. |
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