Much of the fishpond has calm waters with low visibility. However, when the tide is rising, water rushes through the cracks in the seawall, bringing in saltwater, plankton, and small fish... and making it possible to see for more than a few feet underwater. Many filter- and suspension-feeding organisms take advantage of the high-flow environment. Fish gather here to eat plankton and other small invertebrates. Below are a few snapshots of life at the ocean break during a high tide. Many of these organisms are marine, and not found further in at the pond. Among these is the puffer fish Arothron hispidus, a species that has been mysteriously dying around the Hawai'ian Islands.
Thursday, August 5, 2010
Life at the Sea Wall
Much of the fishpond has calm waters with low visibility. However, when the tide is rising, water rushes through the cracks in the seawall, bringing in saltwater, plankton, and small fish... and making it possible to see for more than a few feet underwater. Many filter- and suspension-feeding organisms take advantage of the high-flow environment. Fish gather here to eat plankton and other small invertebrates. Below are a few snapshots of life at the ocean break during a high tide. Many of these organisms are marine, and not found further in at the pond. Among these is the puffer fish Arothron hispidus, a species that has been mysteriously dying around the Hawai'ian Islands.
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