Our first two full days on the Big Island
provided a chance for beach exploration on the south Kona coast. To snorkel I originally
wanted to visit Kealakekua Bay , a marine life
conservation district (state marine reserve), but the only public road led to
the southern part of the Bay where the swell was probably too significant for
the kids to venture much into the water. Honaunau Bay
to the south became an excellent alternate location, and I the reef were
enjoyable enough to return for a second day.
Slate pencil urchins, Heterocentrutus mammillatus. |
The Bay is located just north of a small National Historic
Park and seems to be a
popular tourist location. Many bobbing snorkelers notwithstanding, the fringing
coral reef that hugs the shore was teeming with biological activity. Most human
visitors stayed close to home base and it was easy to get away from the crowds
by venturing a bit north just offshore. The reefs gradually descended offshore,
to depths of probably at least 50 feet. Bright yellow tangs and many other
species were abundant in shallow water, so it was easy to see quite a few fish
species in only 10-20 feet deep.
Corals comprising the reefs came in various shapes, mostly
as massive plates, and some were bleached. The most abundant motile
invertebrates may have been urchins, or at least this was the taxonomic group
that caught my eye. Pencil urchins with their brick red cumbersome spines were tucked
into crevices in the complex reef, while large black urchins with full arrays
of thin quill-like spines ventured out in the open, cognizant that no other
reef creatures would be likely to interfere with their activities.
The fish were most impressive, occurring in abundance,
busily tending to the business of reef life. Bright yellow tangs, in groups or
large schools were probably most common. Other groups included butterfly
fishes, flamboyant Moorish idols, triggerfish and parrotfishes. There was some
chasing, but much of the activity involved feeding; many species were
presumably herbivores grazing the sparse algae that happen to grow up on the
reef. I enjoyed the solitary greenish blue parrotfish which tended to be shy
when I tried to approach with a camera. Most species stayed close to the reef
though a few ventured higher into the water column. Some thin blue fish in
contrast, stayed just beneath the water’s surface, and since one tends to look
down while snorkeling, it was a while before I noticed them.
Thin, well camoflauged bluish fish hanging out near the water's surface. |
A shallow coral escarpment with a pair of ornate butterfly fish, Chaetodon ornatissimus. |
References
Mahaney C, Witte A. 1993. Hawaiian Reef Fish. Blue Kirio
Publishing.
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