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Norfolk Island's Reef

Discover a fragile paradise – Norfolk Island's beaches, lagoons and coral reef
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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 page shows the most recent blog posts. For the complete catalogue, visit the ‘Out on a swim index’ page.

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

A small school of scissortail sergeants with one interloper, an Indo-Pacific sergeant, Norfolk Island

Same, same, but different – confusing fish identities

May 25, 2023

There are a few fish species in the bays that are easily mixed up. Here’s four commonly confused pairs.


The banded sergeant and the blackspot sergeant

These are two different fish species, but it would be easy to not realise. Which is probably why the banded sergeant (Abudefduf septemfasciatus) was only identified as a new species for Norfolk Island in April 2022. When I first noticed it, I did a double take. I couldn’t work out what was different until I looked closely at the photos on my computer screen and compared it with its cousin, the blackspot sergeant (Abudefduf sordidus). Then I was quite easily able to tell the two apart. In common with some of the other doubles that I’ve listed here, these two fish often share the same niche on the reef – living in the sandy shallows, although there are many more blackspots than there are banded sergeants.

View fullsize Banded sergeant - Abudefduf septemfasciatus
Banded sergeant - Abudefduf septemfasciatus
View fullsize Blackspot sergeant - Abudefduf sordidus
Blackspot sergeant - Abudefduf sordidus

The scissortail sergeant and the Indo-Pacific sergeant

These species both inhabit very similar niches in the reef ecosystem, and even like to hang out together. They are both about the same size, although I think the mature Indo-Pacific sergeant (Abudefduf vaigiensis) will get just a smidgeon larger when it is mature, and they both have the five vertical black stripes against a white background. The scissortail sergeant (Abudefduf sexfasciatus) has two distinctive horizontal black stripes on its tail reminiscent of scissor blades, which is what gives it its name. As it matures, the scissortail doesn’t sport such an intense yellow blush when compared to the Indo-Pacific sergeant, as can be seen in the two images, below.

You’ll often see a school of one of these species, like the scissortails, with a lone random interloper, like the Indo-Pacific, swimming among them (see the image at the top of this story).

View fullsize Scissortail sergeant - Abudefduf sexfasciatus
Scissortail sergeant - Abudefduf sexfasciatus
View fullsize Indo-Pacific sergeant - Abudefduf vaigiensis
Indo-Pacific sergeant - Abudefduf vaigiensis

The surge wrasse and the Christmas wrasse

We all know our beautiful surge wrasse (aka the Rainbow Warrior, Thalassoma purpureum). Well, we have another very similar looking fish, particularly when it is compared to a younger female surge wrasse. It’s the Christmas wrasse (Thalassoma trilobatum). The Christmas wrasse is much harder to spot and even harder to photograph. Unlike its show-stopping cousin, it is shy and flighty. It skims around just beneath the surface of the shallow rock ledges at great speed, often where it’s too shallow follow.

I find the easiest way to tell them apart is by looking at the face markings. The female surge wrasse tends to have little dots whereas the colour on the Christmas wrasse is a more solid, rusty tan colour.

View fullsize Surge wrasse - Thalassoma purpureum
Surge wrasse - Thalassoma purpureum
View fullsize Christmas wrasse - Thalassoma trilobatum
Christmas wrasse - Thalassoma trilobatum

The banded snake eel and the convict snake eel

Both these snake eels share a similar body shape, and are quite different to that of many moray eels, which are thicker and have a more obvious dorsal fin. Both these snake eels have black and white bands, but the convict snake eel (Leiuranus versicolor) looks like a cookie cutter has taken bites out of the bands leaving a white spot in each one. The number of black bands with the white spots ‘cut out’ increases as the eel matures. When they are very young it can be difficult to tell the banded snake eel (Leiuranus semicinctus) and the convict snake eel apart. They both like living in the same sandy reaches of the bay and will burrow under the sand to get away from danger.

View fullsize Banded snake eel - Leiuranus semicinctus
Banded snake eel - Leiuranus semicinctus
View fullsize Convict snake eel - Leiuranus versicolor
Convict snake eel - Leiuranus versicolor

 

In Fish species Tags Fish, fish species, coral reef
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Featured
Reef relief
Jul 28, 2025
Reef relief
Jul 28, 2025

Today, 28 July, is World Nature Conservation Day. After the dry 2024, Norfolk Island’s reef is looking healthier – a brief reprieve as less water - laden with nutrients - flowed into the lagoon. These photos show what’s possible. It’s a reminder that recovery is within reach – though renewed runoff could quickly undo the gains.

Jul 28, 2025
Emily Bay's big 'brain' coral
Jul 20, 2025
Emily Bay's big 'brain' coral
Jul 20, 2025

In Emily Bay, Norfolk Island, a single coral bommie – Paragoniastrea australensis – has stood for decades as a micro-reef, harbouring diverse marine life and local memories. Once photographed in 1988 and still thriving today, it remains a keystone of reef biodiversity and a living link between past and present.

Jul 20, 2025
Biodiversity matters
Jul 14, 2025
Biodiversity matters
Jul 14, 2025

Over five and a half years of snorkelling Norfolk’s lagoon, we’ve documented 23 fish species not previously recorded in this area. Some are local ghosts, others climate migrants. These observations help us understand and protect what makes our reef so special.

Jul 14, 2025
Poop power
Jun 17, 2025
Poop power
Jun 17, 2025

Not all poop on a reef is bad poop. In fact some kinds of poop can be a reef’s most important invisible engine. Fish poop, bird poop – even poop that gets eaten again by other fish – all of it keeps the ecosystem ticking over in a way that’s nothing short of extraordinary.

Jun 17, 2025
Glimpses of recovery: what the reef could be if we let it
Jun 13, 2025
Glimpses of recovery: what the reef could be if we let it
Jun 13, 2025

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.

Jun 13, 2025
Warning signs: quiet and unnoticed collapse of two coral colonies
Jun 12, 2025
Warning signs: quiet and unnoticed collapse of two coral colonies
Jun 12, 2025

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.

Jun 12, 2025
Warning signs:  what Norfolk Island’s reef is telling us
Jun 11, 2025
Warning signs: what Norfolk Island’s reef is telling us
Jun 11, 2025

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.

Jun 11, 2025
Warning signs: coral disease takes hold
Jun 10, 2025
Warning signs: coral disease takes hold
Jun 10, 2025

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
Jun 9, 2025

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
Jun 8, 2025

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

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