An eternity, perhaps not quite, but that’s my perception of time when thinking back to my Hawaiian excursion in mid-June. And finishing up a home movie chronicling our adventure, complete with contemporary Island music from the likes IZ for instance, just gets me in the mood for some white sandy beaches and clear salty waters. So why not share a few things I came across while swimming over the reefs of Maui.
Obviously such a post lends itself infinity as the amount of pictures and video I have is substantial… notice I did not mention anything about quality. But with that said, using a digital underwater camera is a goldmine for someone who needs to cull through the blurs to find a few gems.
Of course I need to start the ball rolling with a Hawaiian green sea turtle. It is by far my wife’s favorite marine creature and I am always left in awe at the range of colors found on their carapace. By the way, did you see our Hawaiian green sea turtle video footage? And even in today’s world of rampant conservation information, I was left in shock to discover people clamoring to touch and harass this amazing species (And yes members of our party spoke up immediately to inform the culprits and end their activities). I guess that’s why we need to continue spreading the word.

Hawaiian Green Sea Turtle

A juvenile yellowtail coris (Coris gaimard), which is the first one I have run across in Hawaii

A raccoon butterflyfish (Chaetodon lunula)

A Slate or Red pencil urchin (Heterocentrotus mammillatus) and a black sea urchin (Echinothrix diadema)

A cushion seastar (Culcita novaeguineae)

Whitemouth moray eel (Gymnothorax meleagris)

An Arc-eye hawkfish (Paracirrhites arcatus)

The Hawaiian Day Octopus (Octopus cyanea) and a female bird wrasse (Gomphosus varius)

I left for Maui on Saturday morning so by now I should be well into exploring the reefs, capturing pictures and video, and perhaps indulging in a few tropical beverages. Hopefully I’ll return with some worthy ocean anecdotes and photos to share with the masses.
“In 2004, visual estimates of mortality and algal overgrowth of Montipora capi¬tata and M. cf. turgescens at back reef sites at the three northern atolls conservatively exceeded 50%, with nearly complete mortality of surface-facing portions of colonies at numerous sites. The shallow crest of a large central patch reef system at Kure Atoll, previously referred to as “the coral gardens” due to its luxuriant growth of montiporids and pocilloporids, was heavily bleached in 2002. In 2004, only a few branches of Porites com¬pressa remained alive and the dead coral skeletons were thickly covered in turf and macroalgae.”







