Dive Report, Reef Balls, Long Bay

23 January 2023
High tide 9:20am
Calm, overcast
With Ed Chignell (Skipper / Freediver)

I had given up on finding these reef balls until @jordi_nz figured out why the GPS coordinates I had been using needed adjusting. I made a lot of noise underwater when I first saw them :D

===
Octagon Reef 174°45'20"E 36°40'45"S
9.8m right on slack tide
40 mins

We did not see anything on sidescan at the GPS point, but the fish finder was showing lots of activity. We dropped a float and sinker on the GPS so that our anchor did not hit the reef and anchored 20 meters away. I swam to the float and started descending the line. I saw the reef balls right away, and cheered into my regulator! The visibility on the seafloor was great (for Long Bay) at 4m or so. Two things stood out the fanworm and the fish. I surfaced to let Ed know and grab my camera.

The reef balls were covered in tube worms (probably parchment worms) and a fine growth. Mediterranean fanworm, sea quirts and various sponges dotted the surface. The silver sweep were the dominant fish and were on every ball, they also use the holes a lot, it was fun watching them pop in and out of the hollow balls. c1kg tāmure / snapper moved away from the reef balls while I was scuba diving but were regularly observed by Ed who was free diving. I was most impressed with the numbers of juvenile fish on the reef, mostly tāmure and jack mackerel. This was the first time I've seen juvenile tāmure shelter in fanworm. We saw the occasional spotty, a parore, a few juvenile goatfish and the odd triplefin. I didn't do a good job of photographing the shells but I dont remember seeing any bivalves and most of the molluscs were home to hermit crabs. The floor of each reef ball was littered with shell. Drifting ecklonia and some other algae had been trapped the structures adding complexity. I suspect some of the shell around the bases of the balls had also been swept in.

Two minute video here https://youtu.be/H3g6C2gaoCI

===
Zig Zag Reef 174°45'16"E 36°40'45"S
8m one hour after high tide
36 mins

We used the same technique but noted that the fish were not on the GPS location of the reef. We forgot to accurately re-log the waypoint but think it may be 20m west of the GPS. However we had no trouble finding the reef by free diving. The visibility had noticeably dropped. After the dive we adjusted the sidescan and were able to clearly see the reef balls (20m spread, 800kHz).

There was more sediment in the water here, the tide was now going out but there was little current. Although there was sediment in the sand at Octagon Reef, here it seemed softer and in one spot it was thick and sticky. I had to be more careful not to touch the bottom. I also thought the seafloor sloped down to each reef ball more at this reef (just like a boulder on a sand beach). This reef had caught a large log which added complexity and biodiversity to the reef.

The biodiversity and abundance was were similar to Octagon Reef (including numbers of juvenile fish) with a few exceptions. There were significant numbers of white striped anemone here, I dont remember seeing them on Octagon Reef. A patch of feather hydroids and a different sponge (Dysidea).

I saw more fish in five minutes at these reefs than I did searching hundreds of meters of seafloor in Long Bay looking for the reefs. I have also spent hours on the rocky reefs in this bay (which have abundant fish life) and thought the biodiversity created by the reef ball habitat was unique.

Posted on January 23, 2023 05:34 AM by shaun-lee shaun-lee

Observations

Photos / Sounds

What

Common Kelp (Ecklonia radiata)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 09:25 AM NZDT

Description

Caught by Octagon Reef

Photos / Sounds

What

Finger Sponge (Callyspongia nuda)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 09:33 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on Octagon Reef

Photos / Sounds

What

Jack Mackerels (Genus Trachurus)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 09:54 AM NZDT

Description

Juveniles?

Photos / Sounds

What

Tāmure (Australasian Snapper) (Chrysophrys auratus)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 09:45 AM NZDT

Description

Juveniles were abundant, the odd one around 8cm long. The fishable ones stayed away from the reef while I was there and were observed more by Ed (Freediving).

Photos / Sounds

What

Lined Whelk (Buccinulum linea)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 09:29 AM NZDT

Description

This observation is of the shell not the crab

Photos / Sounds

What

Mediterranean Fanworm (Sabella spallanzanii)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 09:25 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on Octagon Reef

Photos / Sounds

What

Orange Frond Sponge (Crella incrustans)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 09:32 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on Octagon Reef

Photos / Sounds

What

Orange Golf Ball Sponge (Tethya burtoni)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 09:25 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on Octagon Reef

Photos / Sounds

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 09:55 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on Octagon Reef

Photos / Sounds

What

Silver Sweep (Scorpis lineolata)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 09:25 AM NZDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Silver Sweep (Scorpis lineolata)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 09:30 AM NZDT

Description

In reef ball

Photos / Sounds

What

Spotty (Notolabrus celidotus)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 09:25 AM NZDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Sulphur Boring Sponge (Cliona celata)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 09:30 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on Octagon Reef

Photos / Sounds

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 10:50 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on Zig Zag Reef

Photos / Sounds

What

Feather Hydroids (Genus Macrorhynchia)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 11:07 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on Zig Zag Reef

Photos / Sounds

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 11:11 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on fanworm on Zig Zag Reef

Photos / Sounds

What

Yellowtail Scad (Trachurus novaezelandiae)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 10:57 AM NZDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Mud Whelk (Cominella glandiformis)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 10:41 AM NZDT

Description

Not far from Zig Zag Reef

Photos / Sounds

What

Southern Olive (Amalda australis)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 10:59 AM NZDT

Description

Base of Zig Zag Reef

Photos / Sounds

What

Parchment Tubeworms (Family Chaetopteridae)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 11:06 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on Zig Zag Reef

Photos / Sounds

What

Pleated Sea Squirt (Styela plicata)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 11:02 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on Zig Zag Reef

Photos / Sounds

What

Bryozoans (Phylum Bryozoa)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 11:03 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on Zig Zag Reef

Photos / Sounds

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 10:46 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on a log that had drifted into Zig Zag Reef and is now partially buried

Photos / Sounds

What

Speckled Whelk (Cominella adspersa)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 10:53 AM NZDT

Photos / Sounds

What

Silver Sweep (Scorpis lineolata)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 10:50 AM NZDT

Photos / Sounds

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 11:09 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on Zig Zag Reef

Photos / Sounds

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 11:10 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on Zig Zag Reef

Photos / Sounds

What

Sulphur Boring Sponge (Cliona celata)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 10:57 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on Zig Zag Reef

Photos / Sounds

What

White-striped Anemone (Anthothoe albocincta)

Observer

shaun-lee

Date

January 23, 2023 11:05 AM NZDT

Description

Growing on Zig Zag Reef

Comments

Great report Shaun, thank you! Glad the coordinates were correct this time around.

Having also spent a considerable number of hours diving the coastal reefs of this reserve, and after having watched the video and read your report, I also think the biota supported by these reefs is unique within the reserve (to the best of my knowledge).

I enjoyed seeing the fish coming in and out of the holes and was surprised by the quantity of juvenile fish sheltering in the structures. I have certainly not witnessed the same number of young juveniles in other parts of the reserve (particularly snapper). Good to see some pelagic fish species that I haven't previously observed in the reserve as well.

Interesting, re presence/absence of white-striped anemone. The difference in depth between site is only ~1.5m and well within the known range of the species.

Certainly not surprised about the Sabella! Slightly disappointed by the absence of green-lipped mussels since they were recorded being present in these reefs albeit long time ago.

Cheers,
Jordi

Posted by jordi_nz over 1 year ago

Great to see that these have survived over 20 years, although moved around a little by anchoring boats. They colonised very rapidly and became shelter for lots of juvenile fish as we had hoped. The molluscs at times became a larder for local octopus. I saw a medium size octopus sheltering under the edge of a reef ball surrounded by the empty shells from the feasting. Silt is a huge problem. On one dive I found great pillow like drifts of fine silt. These were so deep that I could plunge my arm and extended fingers through them and not reach firm sand. We were concerned the reefs might simply get buried so it is very exciting to see them still in place. Thanks and well done Shaun!

Posted by jonathanjaffrey about 1 year ago

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