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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
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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.

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From little things – watching them grow

January 4, 2025

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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In Fish Tags fish, fish species, Blackeye thicklip, iNaturalist, Norfolk Island, coral reef
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Emily Bay at low tide, early morning, December 2024

A year in review – 2024 on Norfolk Island’s Reef

December 27, 2024

It is five years since I began wielding a camera underwater in Norfolk Island’s lagoons and my third ‘year in review’ for this ‘Out on a swim’ blog. And what a journey it has been. At least this year I have some great news to report, but – a bit like a curate’s egg (partly bad and partly good) – there are also some downers. Find out what 2024 has meant for Norfolk Island’s reef.

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In Environmental degradation Tags Norfolk Island, coral reef, corals, coral health, water quality, environment, environmental protections
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Echidna nebulosa, snowflake moray, Norfolk Island

A smooth and slippery echidna

December 10, 2024

How did the snowflake moray get its proper (scientific) name Echidna nebulosa, and what does it have to do with Australia’s famous and iconic marsupial, the echidna? Read on to find out more …

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In Fish, Fish species Tags Moray, Eel, Fish, Taxonomy, Echidna
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Feisty zingers! Focus on the 'brain' coral, Paragoniastrea spp.

December 1, 2024

If corals had characters, then the Paragoniastrea spp. would be described as feisty, or even downright aggressive when it comes to asserting itself over its neighbours. They are also rather colourful.

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In Corals Tags corals, coral reef, Paragoniastrea australensis, brain coral, lesser star coral
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This Acropora colony on Norfolk Island’s reef was photographed in 2021. Today it is no longer there. Weakened by disease, it was destroyed by a storm surge two years later, in December 2023

Then and now – shifting baseline syndrome laid bare

November 20, 2024

If disease were spreading through our native forests, if our trees were developing strange growths that hollowed them out, making them brittle in the face of each passing storm, would five years have slid by with the problem worsening by the day? That is exactly what is happening on Norfolk Island’s reef. Slowly, insidiously, it is dying and turning to slime.

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In Environmental degradation Tags Coral disease, corals, Water quality, shifting baseline syndrome, coral health
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Montipora corals, Norfolk Island

Gorgeous, boring and brown!

October 20, 2024

Gorgeous, boring brown, Montipora corals! These beautiful coral colonies (and remember, these consist of loads of tiny little animals, which work together to create these amazing shapes) are one of our key reef-building corals. There are around 85 known species belonging to the Montipora genus.

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In Corals Tags corals, coral reef, Montipora
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Extensive area of acropora coral affected by white syndrome on Norfolk Island’s reef

Taking stock. Which way from here?

October 14, 2024

CSIRO are on Norfolk Island this week to present the findings of their report into water quality. As our Administrator, George Plant, says: ‘What the data shows us is that the quality of ground and surface water entering Emily and Slaughter Bays often contains high levels of contamination ... The health of the Emily and Slaughter Bay reef will continue to decline if we do not improve water quality.’

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In Environmental degradation Tags Coral disease, corals, Water quality
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You may call this beauty 'Lobophyllia recta sensu Veron'

September 15, 2024

One of the first corals to catch my eye when I set out with my new camera in January 2020 was this stunning boulder coral that sits off the Salt House in Emily Bay. Regular swimmers would all be aware of its presence, but not many would realise that it is quite possibly an as-yet undescribed species of coral, which for the moment is known as Lobophyllia recta sensu Veron.

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In Corals Tags corals, coral reef, threatened species, endemic species, endemic, Stony coral, boulder coral
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A juvenile Hawksbill sea turtle, Eretmochelys imbricata, inside Emily Bay lagoon, Norfolk Island, listed as critically endangered, according to the IUCN Red List, and vulnerable under the EPBC Act

'Barometers of life' – National Threatened Species Day

September 7, 2024

Today's National Threatened Species Day post discusses the conundrum of Australia's threatened species list and the IUCN Red List as they relate to vulnerable and threatened species here on Norfolk Island in the Marine Park. How, for example, do we offer protections to something that hasn't been formally identified yet, let alone listed as threatened?

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In Environmental degradation Tags Environment, Environmental protection, government, government policy, environmental protections, Water quality, sewerage, coral reef, coral health, endemic, threatened species, biodiversity
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The channel flowing into Emily Bay, Norfolk Island, 1pm on 20 July 2024

Groundhog Day in Emily Bay

August 9, 2024

Four years ago, we had what amounted to nothing short of an environmental catastrophe in our lagoons. In the intervening years we have had numerous reports commissioned and delivered, and I have written plenty of blog posts about our poor water quality. Three weeks ago, on 20 July 2024, it all happened again. In this post, I explain exactly what occurred. Groundhog Day in Emily Bay, Norfolk Island.

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Green moon wrasse, Norfolk Island, 17 July 2024

Ageing colourfully. This guy!

July 23, 2024

I’ve been photographing this guy, a green moon wrasse, since 2020, when he was a young adult just transitioning from being a female to a male. Green moon wrasse are said to live five to seven years in the wild, which means that our lovely old friend here could well be classified as an elder. This post is dedicated to this cheeky and inquisitive fish, the boss!

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In Fish Tags Fish behaviour, Fish, fish species, wrasse, green moon wrasse
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The Emily Bay’s massive ‘brain’ coral, Paragoniastrea australensis, photographed on 6 July 2024

While you were sleeping ...

July 10, 2024

This massive and incredibly slow-growing Paragoniastrea australensis sits in Emily Bay on Norfolk Island and is one of our most recognisable bommies. While all looks reasonably calm during the day, at night, while you are sleeping, the surface of the coral colony seethes with millions of tiny tentacles busily reaching out to find food, while others aggressively ward off opportunistic interlopers.

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In Corals Tags corals, coral reef, bommie, Emily Bay, Norfolk Island
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Male birdnose wrasse, Gomphosus varius, Norfolk Island

Gender transitioning in the birdnose wrasse

July 7, 2024

All birdnose wrasses are born female but will change to males if the conditions are right. Its appearance changes radically throughout is lifecycle, from when it is a juvenile, through to being a female and then finally to being a male (known as sexual metamorphosis, or sequential hermaphroditism). For about three weeks you can see that transition taking place in the sequence of photos in this blog.

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In Fish Tags Fish, Fish behaviour, fish species, wrasse, bird wrasse
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The mesmerising maze of the Paragoniastrea australensis

One hundred year-old coral gone in less than one hundred days

May 27, 2024

Paragoniastrea australensis is an incredibly slow growing species of coral. The colony featured in this post is probably 100 years old. When disease took hold in January 2024, it was gone, dead, in less than 100 days. Now it is a skeleton overgrown with algae. The worst part of this sad story is that it is our fault it died.

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Blue-barred parrotfish (Scarus ghobban), last seen in September 2021

Fish stocktake – the mysteries, the surprises and the wins

April 22, 2024

In my ‘Year in review for 2023 on Norfolk Island’s reef’, published in December 2023, I made a few observations about the apparent disappearance of some fish species from Norfolk Island’s lagoons. I thought I would revisit these, principally because since December there has been so much additional fish activity here, with some exciting population increases and a few new species turning up.

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In Biodiversity, Fish, Fish species Tags Fish behaviour, Fish, weather, rainfall, fish species, observations
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The view across Emily Bay and Slaughter Bay’s contiguous reef at low tide. Quintal’s Passage can be seen as two parrallel lines of rocks. It runs from Emily out to sea.

Blasting a passage through the reef, Norfolk Island

April 6, 2024

We have shaped Kingston, Norfolk Island, to suit our own ends, whether it is by draining the swamp, undertaking major earthworks, or by using it for agriculture and grazing. Our interventions have placed the reef at risk. But simultaneously, the confluence of human activity and a unique natural environment have created a place of incredible significance, which deserves some special management to preserve all its facets.

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In Ecosystem Tags Kingston, World Heritage Area, Norfolk Island, Water quality, Quintal's passage, coral reef, coral health, coral disease, Colonial settlement
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Surge wrasse, Thalassoma purpureum, Norfolk Island

Meet George, the surge wrasse

March 13, 2024

George is a surge wrasse, also known as a green-blocked wrasse, purple wrasse or red and green wrasse, and more formally as a Thalassoma purpureum. All Norfolk Island’s lagoon-dwelling surge wrasses are referred to as ‘George’. These guys are insanely, eye-achingly colourful, so I decided they were worthy of a photo dump on these pages.

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High tide and pounding waves on Norfolk Island’s coral lagoon, southern shore, looking east towards Point Hunter

Norfolk Island reef's autopsy reports

March 3, 2024

More reports to add to a long catalogue of reports were delivered to the general public over the last few days on Norfolk Island’s water quality and reef health. Reassuringly, they all say the same thing. Our poor water quality is affecting the health of our reef. So the science must be good! So when are we going to do something about it?

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In Environmental degradation Tags water quality, reports, Norfolk Island, coral health, coral disease, World Heritage Area
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Green moon wrasse, Emily Bay, Norfolk Island

I only have fish eyes for you!

February 22, 2024

Do fish have eyes that move independently? Well, no, not really, but, yes, sort of, in some species, sometimes!

Read on for a brief ‘Fish eyes 101’ summary of how they work.

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In Fish Tags fisheye, Fish, fish species, anatomy, Norfolk Island, Emily Bay
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A territorial banded scalyfin, Parma polylepis (aatuti), Norfolk Island

Know your damsels – multispine damselfish versus banded scalyfins

February 7, 2024

The banded scalyfins and the multispine damselfish are arguably two of the most common species in Norfolk Island’s lagoons. People often confuse them, particularly the juveniles, so here are some photos to clarify which are which. Once the differences have been pointed out, you’ll never confuse them again.

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In Fish species Tags fish species, fish, damselfish, aatuti, Norfolk Island
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Featured
How surgeonfishes got their name
June 14, 2026
How surgeonfishes got their name
June 14, 2026

Surgeonfish are named for the sharp little scalpels near their tails, but on Norfolk’s reef their more useful work happens at the other end. Pencil surgeonfish, bluespine unicornfish and their relatives help browse algae across the reef – a small daily job that becomes very valuable on an algae-rich lagoon reef like ours.

June 14, 2026
A shrimp storm
May 28, 2026
A shrimp storm
May 28, 2026

While setting my research cams last week, I swam into what looked like an underwater snowstorm. It appeared to be the aftermath of a mass moulting event, with large numbers of tiny, translucent shrimp-like exoskeletons drifting together near the surface.

May 28, 2026
Kingston dredging: what happens when a reef does not fit the framework
May 28, 2026
Kingston dredging: what happens when a reef does not fit the framework
May 28, 2026

This correspondence with DCCEEW is about more than one dredging proposal. It is about what happens when an ecologically distinctive place is assessed through standard tools that do not always make its most important values easy to see. I am publishing it here because that is something we need to be aware of, both on Norfolk Island and more broadly in Australia.

May 28, 2026
Kingston dredging: the project advances, the questions remain
May 24, 2026
Kingston dredging: the project advances, the questions remain
May 24, 2026

Kingston dredging is edging closer, and the paper trail is growing. This post brings together earlier correspondence with the Department and the latest media release so readers can see what has been asked, what has been answered, and what still remains unclear about the project, its rationale, and the protections proposed for the reef.

May 24, 2026
The lime-green coral in Slaughter Bay – a 40-year paper trail
May 17, 2026
The lime-green coral in Slaughter Bay – a 40-year paper trail
May 17, 2026

Green Mountain – the name I give this coral in my database – is a coral I’ve photographed for years as I swim past. Then I found its backstory in the Norfolk Island National Parks archives: a rough map, reused paper, a note in the margin – ‘still thriving’. That’s how baselines begin.

May 17, 2026
What Norfolk Island’s reef tells us about environmental blind spots
April 5, 2026
What Norfolk Island’s reef tells us about environmental blind spots
April 5, 2026

The Kingston dredging proposal on Norfolk Island raises a bigger question than dredging alone: how well do standard environmental assessment tools capture the real significance of a remote and unusual reef system like Norfolk Island’s?

April 5, 2026
Hammer coral time!
March 30, 2026
Hammer coral time!
March 30, 2026

Hammer corals have unique tentacles that are large, fleshy, and tubular; these terminate in a ‘T’-shaped, hammer-head or anchor. Beneath all these softly waving tentacles is an extraordinary skeleton structure, which helps define them as a large polyp stony coral.

March 30, 2026
Norfolk Island’s fishes: drifters, residents and the ones still missing
March 24, 2026
Norfolk Island’s fishes: drifters, residents and the ones still missing
March 24, 2026

Norfolk Island’s fish fauna reflects both connection and isolation. Some species may arrive from elsewhere as drifting larvae, some populations appear to persist locally, and some fishes known from islands on either side of Norfolk have still not been recorded here. This post looks at what old survey work, regional checklists and genetic studies suggest about that more complicated picture.

March 24, 2026
18 Jun 2025 (20)_crop.jpg
March 7, 2026
Alveopora or flowerpot coral – how to tell the difference
March 7, 2026

They look alike at first glance, but Alveopora and flowerpot corals are not the same. The easiest way to tell them apart is to count the tentacles.

March 7, 2026
Norfolk’s lagoonal reef – the 2025 report, in plain English
February 27, 2026
Norfolk’s lagoonal reef – the 2025 report, in plain English
February 27, 2026

We now have the 2025 Norfolk Island reef health report, so I’m taking the opportunity to translate it into plain English here. Sadly, it’s more of the same story in Emily and Slaughter Bays – a reef that can cope with some stress, but is being asked to cope with too much, too often.

February 27, 2026

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