The first time I saw these glitzy glamour bubbles I had no idea what I was looking at, so I took a photo and went home to do some digging. A little research uncovered a really cool organism. Commonly known as a dead sailor’s eyeballs, or bubble algae, they shine like small mirrors, catching the light. But the BEST bit about these bubbles is that they are one of the largest single-celled organisms in the world.
Read MoreNotch-head marblefish
The smiling notch-head marblefish
Underwater, feather caulerpa, Caulerpa taxifolia, looks like a gorgeous, lush, green meadow.
Read MoreHealthy corals, Emily Bay, Norfolk Island
Bounty Day brings some biting winds!
Today is Bounty Day here on Norfolk Island. It’s a day of celebration for Norfolk Islanders of Pitcairn descent – the day when, in 1856, their forbears first arrived on the island. Sadly, in the water, we have had some parts of the reef destroyed by huge surf. On the upside, the circle of life continues with some great observations, including large numbers of surge wrasse, Thalassoma purpureum, and much more.
Read MoreIs this coral endemic to Norfolk Island?
Enormous surf, squally winds and poor viz!
Today is the first day of winter with cool winds blowing straight up from Antarctica. Many readers will laugh, but for a sub-tropical island, we are really feeling the wind chill at the moment. However, as always, I have some exciting observations to recount.
Read MoreElegant wrasse - Anampses elegans (terminal phase, male)
Snip the (plastic) rings!
Emily Bay, Norfolk Island
When plastic (and gold wedding) rings escape into the wild
Like many places around the globe, Norfolk Island has its issues with getting rid of waste. Even so, Norfolk Island is one of the cleanest places I’ve seen; however, we know we can’t be complacent. So, back in February 2021, it was gut-wrenching to see a couple of sand mullet – Myxus elongatus – wearing plastic collars – those rings found on plastic juice and milk bottles. Sometimes these rings escape into the wild, and this is the sad consequence.
Read MoreBlue drummer - Girella cyanea
Here's looking at you!
I thought I’d have a bit of fun and post some of my favourite images of fish as they look at me head on. It’s such a beautiful perspective, and one that often makes you wonder what they are thinking. Enjoy!
Read MoreParrotfish swim using their pectoral fins
The sand poopers
Parrotfish eat algae and coral polyps, and to get at these they chow down on the hard coral skeletons. More teeth in their throat (plates known as a pharyngeal mill) grind the coral into a paste so they can extract the nutritious coral polyps and algae. What comes out the other end is beautiful white sand. A lot of it!
Read MoreThe ‘hit and run’ fish
What a cool name for a fish, the piano fangblenny! It is more properly known as Plagiotremus tapeinosoma. Many snorkellers will know them first by their little nip as they hit and run! Once you’ve seen them and experienced them that first time, you know to shoo them away to avoid another nibble!
Read MoreCharisma plus! The bluespine unicornfish
One of the many characterful fish in the Emily and Slaughter Bay environs on Norfolk Island are the bluespine unicornfish, more properly known as Naso unicornis. These guys love to pose for the camera, showing off their best side, and then shifting so you can get a shot of the other.
Read MoreThe doubleheader's double life!
Love these doubleheader wrasse, Coris bulbifrons. Beautiful deep smoky blue with a big bulge on their forehead, they will quite often just casually cruise on past. Like many wrasse, they change sex, colour and appearance quite radically as they age and grow.
Read MoreWhen the yelloweye leatherjackets go courting
How special to see this. Normally shy and a little timid, these little leatherjackets were quite happy concentrating on each other as I watched them courting.
Read MoreA little mado with attitude!
This little eastern footballer or mado has suddenly started hanging with a family of stripeys that I've been watching. But it always keeps slightly apart, aloof, even. In fact, sometimes it almost seems like it is herding them - and giving lectures! This guy definitely has attitude!
Read MoreMarbled parrotfish - Leptoscarus vaigiensis
Once a boy, always a boy – the marbled parrotfish
The marbled parrotfish (Leptoscarus vaigiensis) likes to camouflage itself, disappearing into the seagrass and algae on which it feeds.
Read MoreThe sea-wolves of Emily Bay
Attracted by the easy pickings, I then watched as the silver trevally – Pseudocaranx sp 'dentex' – arrived. Like a sleek pack of wolves they swept around, in and out of the drum scooping up whatever they could. The fry shrank back, huddling together, trying to stay out of the maelstrom and away from so many hungry mouths.
Read MoreUnderwater wars! Aatuti versus the elegant wrasse
The banded scalyfin damselfish are keen underwater gardeners who don't take kindly to their carefully tended and guarded patches being raided by schools of elegant wrasse.
Read MorePhotographed in Cemetery Bay
Goniopora norfolkensis – an uncommon coral
A reasonably common coral here is this beautiful brown, but sometimes creamy or caramel coloured fronded species called Goniopora norfolkensis..
Read MoreHalfmoon grouper - Epinephelus rivulatus
Close encounter with a halfmoon grouper
A close encounter with a halfmoon grouper causes an amazing transformation from mottled red to mustard yellow.
Read MoreNorfolk Island blenny, Parablennius serratolineatus
Cute as a button, the Norfolk Island blenny
The Norfolk Island blenny is a teeny little shy guy, who hangs out quite a bit at one end of Slaughter Bay and also in Cemetery. Extremely localised, they are endemic to Norfolk Island.
Read MoreJuvenile Norfolk cardinalfish, Ostorhinchus norfolcensis, under the raft, Emily Bay
Mouth-brooding Norfolk cardinalfish
Norfolk cardinalfish are called big eyes on Norfolk Island, and it is easy to see why! These guys are mouth brooders, as in the male nurtures the eggs in his mouth.
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