Ocean
Watch
Friday, September 05, 2003
Beachcoming at first light
yields treasure
I am one of the few people I know who
can get a stiff neck and sore back from walking the beach. I give myself
these aches because I spend most of my stroll looking down at the sand to
see what’s washed in.
This love of beachcombing is one of
the passions that drove me to study marine biology. I wanted to put names
to my finds.
Last week, I indulged in my
scavenging obsession at Kailua Beach. The trade winds had been blowing
hard for days and the tide was lowest at first light. At dawn, I headed
for the water.
Because the wind often blows directly
toward land in Kailua, its beach can be a giant treasure chest. This time
I hit the jackpot.
For the first time ever, I found a
stranded mantis shrimp. The live, 3-inch-long creature lay on its back
just above the surf line. The early morning sun caused the shrimp’s red,
pink and green colors to shimmer. The shrimp’s big, compound eyes wiggled
on their long stalks.
Since mantis shrimp’s first two claws
fold neatly under their bodies like switchblades, I didn’t touch the dying
creature.
I moved on and soon had another first
find: a baby cornetfish. This trumpetfish cousin has a long narrow snout,
a long narrow body and a long narrow filament trailing from its tail.
I’ve heard people call this filament a stinger, but it is not. It’s a
soft, flexible strand of flesh.
Cornetfish grow to 5 feet long, but
even so can be easily overlooked. It seems pretty hard to miss a
5-foot-long fish, but cornetfish are so skinny and so color-camouflaged,
you can easily swim past one and never know it’s there.

Cornetfish (Spencer
Tinker, “Fishes of Hawaii”)
Cornetfish eat other fish almost
exclusively and that’s why I was so interested in examining the dead
cornetfish’s snout. At first glance, this slim snout seems to be two
long, closed jaws, like a needlefish beak. Cornetfish snouts, however,
are actually narrow tubes ending in small mouths that contain tiny teeth.
Neither mouth nor snout nor teeth
look like they could handle anything but the most miniscule fish.
Cornetfish, however, have tricks up their snouts. This fish’s jaws and
mouth are capable of enormous expansion, and the bottom of the snout is
elastic. The tubemouth, then, can inhale fish larger than seems
possible. And I mean inhale. Cornetfish catch fish by sucking them in,
pipette style.
After the cornetfish, I moved on.
Here’s what else I saw:
-
An adult
male frigatebird riding the wind, two wedge-tailed shearwaters shearing
the water and a wandering tattler pecking along the surfline.
-
About a
hundred small Portuguese man-of-wars.
-
A mole
crab (locally known as sand turtles) grabbing the tentacle of a beached
Portuguese man-of-war.
-
About a
hundred ghost crabs of all sizes.
-
A big
ghost crab eating a dead manini (convict tang.)
-
A sea
cucumber caught in a pile of seaweed.
-
A moray
eel caught and discarded by an angler.
-
A bottle
covered with dying gooseneck barnacles.
I enjoy snorkeling and diving, but
for me, nothing beats a solitary walk on a windward beach at first light.
Sand biology suits me.
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