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Norfolk Island's Reef

Discover a fragile paradise – Norfolk Island's beaches, lagoons and coral reef
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    • Kingston, Norfolk Island
    • Underwater
    • Reef Fish
    • Sharks
    • Eels
    • Corals
    • Sea Anemones
    • Nudibranchs, Sea Slugs and Flatworms
    • Octopuses
    • Sea Urchins and Sea Cucumbers
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Out on A Swim

‘Out on a swim’ is a coral reef blog that tells the stories of the characters who live under the waves and what has caught my eye when ‘out on a swim’ in the lagoons of Norfolk Island. It is also a record of the difficulties Norfolk Island’s reef faces, like many others around the world, as a result of the poor water quality that has been allowed to flow onto it.

This blog is rated in the Top 20 Coral Reef Blogs in the world.

Healthy montipora coral, Norfolk Island

Portrait of a slow death

March 10, 2023

DAY 10 – MARCH FOCUS ON NORFOLK ISLAND’S REEF

Today’s focus on Norfolk Island’s reef is a photo essay. This series of photographs demonstrates how disease affects a coral bommie by gradually killing the coral and creating an environment that allows algae to gain a foothold and to eventually take over.

I first photographed this montipora coral bommie in January 2022 when I first saw the unmistakeable signs of white syndrome on one side. I have returned regularly to record the disease as it has spread, quickly at first, but then more gradually, until a few days ago when I took the last photograph in the series (below) to show you what it looks like now, one year on. Dead coral is overgrown with a luxuriant algal growth, leaving no toehold for coral recruitment (coral babies) on the dead substrate.

The new disease is bright white, but as algae takes over it gradually merges into the brown, as you can see in the series.

To be able to see these things happening, you need to be in the water over an extended period of time, looking at the same things and photographing them, time and time again. Recording these events is the only way to combat ‘shifting baseline syndrome’, a phenomenon that I mentioned in my introduction to this series: The camera doesn’t lie – looking back over three years of observations.

Coral reef researcher Professor Callum Roberts from the University of Exeter in the UK often talks about shifting baseline syndrome, saying, ‘[it] renders each new generation blind to past losses, setting their personal baseline of normality by what they first find.’

In other words, if you were new to our reef and swam past the bommie today, you would probably not give it a second glance.

If we retain the status quo with our water quality – as in allowing high levels of nutrients into our overland waterways and groundwater streams – this kind of transition is going to keep happening again and again. However, if we grasp the nettle and get serious about how we look after our water – for example, by examining everything we use in or near our water systems, whether it is to wash our hair and clean our toilets, what we spray on and feed our plants, what animals we allow near our waterways, how we dispose of our waste, and how we maintain our septic systems – then conditions may improve leading to a reduction in algal growth. This would then allow space for new baby corals (planulae) to settle and start growing, thereby regenerating the reef.

We need to decide how much our reef means to us.

View fullsize 29 January 2022
29 January 2022
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11 March 2022
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20 March 2022
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17 May 2023
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19 September 2022
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8 March 2023
In Environmental degradation Tags White syndrome, algae, coral reef, coral disease, Coral, phase shift, shifting baseline syndrome
← A boring, brown reef?Phase shifts and biodiversity →
Featured
Glimpses of recovery: what the reef could be if we let it
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Glimpses of recovery: what the reef could be if we let it
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Day 6 of this photo series from Norfolk Island coincides with the final day of the UN Ocean Conference in Nice. After a week of documenting decline, today’s post offers a different view – what reef recovery can look like when conditions improve. Drought in 2024 gave the reef a break, and the results were unmistakable: healthier corals, lower disease, and more fish. This is what’s possible if we act.

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Warning signs: quiet and unnoticed collapse of two coral colonies
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Day 5 of my blog series for the UN Ocean Conference: two long-lived coral colonies in Norfolk’s lagoon died quietly from disease. No drama – just slow collapse and overgrowth by algae. A reminder that not all reef losses are loud, but they are happening.

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Warning signs:  what Norfolk Island’s reef is telling us
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Day 4 of a week-long photo series from Norfolk Island, shared during the UN Ocean Conference in Nice. Today’s post spotlights a Hydnophora pilosa colony where white syndrome appeared suddenly and spread quickly, taking out around a quarter of the coral. In the months that followed, algae quietly filled the gap – a subtle but telling shift from coral to algae that’s happening across the reef.

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Warning signs: coral disease takes hold
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Warning signs: coral disease takes hold
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In Day 3 of this blog post series, published while leaders gather at the UN Ocean Conference in Nice, we see Norfolk Island’s coral reef lagoon quietly delivering a stark warning: recurrent land-based pollution, coral disease, and delayed decisions are dismantling this ecosystem in real time.

Jun 10, 2025
Warning signs: coral growth anomalies – the slow cancers of the reef
Jun 9, 2025
Warning signs: coral growth anomalies – the slow cancers of the reef
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Day 2’s post coinciding with the UN Ocean Conference looks at coral growth anomalies – sometimes called coral ‘cancers’. These slow-moving diseases quietly weaken coral colonies, making them far more vulnerable to storm damage and algal takeover. On Norfolk Island’s reef, I’ve watched this exact process play out over several years. This is how chronic stress silently dismantles coral ecosystems.

Jun 9, 2025
Warning signs: shifting baselines on Norfolk Island’s reef
Jun 8, 2025
Warning signs: shifting baselines on Norfolk Island’s reef
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Today is World Ocean Day — a timely moment to launch my week-long blog series on Norfolk Island’s reef. Each day this week, I’ll be sharing photo essays that document the slow but steady pressures reshaping this fragile reef. Today: how shifting baselines make us blind to what we’ve already lost.

Jun 8, 2025
The Governance–Government Vacuum: Norfolk Island’s Forgotten Ecology
Apr 29, 2025
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A personal reflection on Norfolk Island’s coral reef environment, political denial, and what John Wyndham’s The Kraken Wakes can still teach us about slow-moving disasters — and why this election matters more than ever.

Apr 29, 2025
Cute as buttons – Astrea curta
Feb 20, 2025
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Feb 20, 2025

Astrea curta corals are ‘small, moderately plocoid [flattened], distinct, and almost circular’ . Normally grey-green in colour, you can see from the images here, ours are often beautiful rich gold, although they do vary. They have a neat growth habit and button-like corallites, which can grow in columns, spherically or flattened. Large colonies of these can form gorgeous undulating bumps.

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From 'Watch' to 'Warning'
Jan 26, 2025
From 'Watch' to 'Warning'
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Last week, the chance of coral bleaching in Norfolk Island’s inshore lagoons was raised from ‘Watch’ to ‘Warning’ and will more than likely rise to Alert levels one and two in coming weeks. So why do I worry about water quality all the time when bleaching seems inevitable these days and so the reef is probably doomed anyway? Read on to find out.

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Small numbers of different fish species is not an unusual phenomenon on Norfolk Island’s reef, but it does demonstrate what a tiny, precious, coral reef ecosystem we have, when we can count individuals on one hand and watch each of them grow, like these little blackeye thicklips, a member of the wrasse family.

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