Author: Heather Buttivant

  • 50 Years on from the Torrey Canyon – A fragile recovery

    50 Years on from the Torrey Canyon – A fragile recovery

    Next month, 50 years will have passed since the Torrey Canyon tanker ran aground off the Isles of Scilly, releasing a 700 square km oil slick. On the last day of 2016, I visited Porth Mear to learn how a long-term survey has revealed the secrets of the beach’s fragile recovery, and to see if the St Piran’s hermit crab (Clibanarius erythropus)has managed to make more than a temporary comeback.

    Clibanarius erythropus - A red legged hermit crab making a comeback in the Cornish rock pools this year.
    Clibanarius erythropus – A red legged hermit crab making a comeback in the Cornish rock pools this year.

    When the Torrey Canyon hit rocks in February 1967, its cargo of oil ended up on the Cornish, Breton and nearby coasts. The oil, along with huge quantities of solvent emulsifying chemicals used in an attempt to disperse it, decimated seabird populations and marine wildlife.

    Concerned by the impact on his local beach, biology teacher, Richard Pearce, decided to monitor the wildlife on the shore three times a year. He’s been doing his survey without fail ever since.

    I wasn’t born when Richard first marked out his quadrats on Porth Mear beach, but I grew up hearing stories of the horror people felt at the sight of the thick black tide, the pervasive smell of the oil, and the woefully unprepared volunteers attempting to shift the cloying oil with garden tools. Decades later, lumps of tar were still washing onto our beaches after every storm.

    I’ve always wondered what the process of recovery looked like, so I jumped at the chance to join Richard at Porth Mear for survey number 150.

    Survey 150…

    It’s clear, after many surveys, that Richard knows the beach well. So well, in fact, that even when the gouged crosses and splodges of green paint that mark the survey quadrats have worn away or been covered up by seaweed, he still knows exactly where they are.

    Richard examines a quadrat while Chris notes the data
    Richard examines a quadrat while Chris notes the data

    As he shows me his method, calling out the presence and coverage of seaweeds, barnacles and molluscs to his partner, Richard tells me how after the Torrey Canyon disaster the green seaweeds were the first to flourish. With many of the grazing molluscs wiped out by the oil and the chemicals used to disperse it, the seaweeds soon took over. After this other animals gradually returned.

    Crosses in the rock and paint marks show the quadrat boundaries - now on his 150th survey Richard knows just where they all are!
    Crosses in the rock and paint marks show the quadrat boundaries – now on his 150th survey Richard knows just where they all are!

    Over the years, Richard has seen many changes. Some are seasonal or weather related, others are harder to explain but may be due to warming seas. Why one pool that was once crammed with mussels now has almost none and why limpets are doing particularly well this season is hard to say, but the data he is collecting reveals changes that would otherwise go unnoticed.

     

    Not for the faint-hearted - Richard has to scrabble down steep rocks and wade knee-deep to reach some of his quadrats.
    Not for the faint-hearted – Richard has to scrabble down steep rocks and wade knee-deep to reach some of his quadrats.

    The tide drops and, while Richard is knee-deep examining a quadrat alongside a long deep pool, I explore the lower shore pools, determined to find out whether the St Piran’s crab is still here. After an absence of more than 30 years, this equal-clawed hermit crab started to reappear around Cornwall in 2016 and we had one record on this beach in the spring. Although past records are too patchy to be sure, it’s thought that pollution from the Torrey Canyon played a role in the loss of this species, so 50 years on it would be lovely to find it re-establishing.

    Every time I see a shell move, I leap on it, looking for the red legs and spotty eyes, but every one is a common hermit crab (Pagurus bernhardus).

    The disappointment mounts... I find lots of common hermit crabs (Pagurus bernhardus) - the right claw is much chunkier than the left with lots of raised bumps on it.
    The disappointment mounts… I find lots of common hermit crabs (Pagurus bernhardus) – the right claw is much chunkier than the left with lots of raised bumps on top.

    Rooting around in the pools always reveals some unexpected treasures. I make my first record of a stalked jellyfish (Calvadosia cruxmelitensis) at this site.

    Stalked jellyfish - Calvadosia cruxmelitensis - at Porth Mear
    Stalked jellyfish – Calvadosia cruxmelitensis – at Porth Mear

    This is always a good beach for finding Cornish clingfish, and the rocks of the lower shores don’t disappoint. In one small area I find a dozen of these stunning little duck-faced fish, some with iridescent blue spots on their heads.

    Cornish clingfish at Porth Mear
    Cornish clingfish at Porth Mear

     

    And another Cornish clingfish...
    And another Cornish clingfish…

    As I follow a gully across the shore I find several scorpion fish lurking among the rocks. Brittle stars lurch away into the seaweed and Xantho pilipes crabs close up, pretending to be pebbles.

    My other half and Junior join me, hunting for crabs and fish. Every thirty seconds I remind them that we need to look for little hermit crabs and they ignore me as they should. They’re used to me and my missions.

    Not a hermit crab... a feisty male edible crab at Porth Mear.
    Not a hermit crab… a feisty male edible crab at Porth Mear.

    Junior at least keeps pointing out suitable pools. He knows they like the ones with pink coralline seaweed and there are lots here. I barely have time to glance at one before he’s trying to drag me to the next.

    And then it happens. A shell moves and as soon as I pick it up I know. The legs are red, the shape’s wrong for the common hermit crab.  When the crab extends its claws there can be no doubt, they’re hairy and pretty much equal sized. This is a St Piran’s crab.

    When I see the red legs and equal-sized claws I know - a St Piran's hermit crab at Porth Mear
    When I see the red legs and equal-sized claws I know – a St Piran’s hermit crab at Porth Mear

    I yell like I’ve won a golden ticket. Under my camera it’s easy to see the black and white spotty eyes of the crab. We all gather to look and as I take an underwater photo, I see other shells moving.

    The long eye-stalks with black and white-spotted eyes are distinctive too - a St Piran's crab at Porth Mear
    The long eye-stalks with black and white-spotted eyes are distinctive too – a St Piran’s crab at Porth Mear

    Sure enough, this next shell has a St Piran’s crab in it, and the next, and the next. While I’m taking photos in the pool, Richard is examining shells on the rock by a small overhang. “There are nine more here,” he says. Soon we’ve counted at least fourteen. They’re all larger than the one found here earlier in 2016.

    A St Piran's hermit crab in the pool at Porth Mear
    A St Piran’s hermit crab in the pool at Porth Mear

    Whether there are other groups of St Piran’s crabs on this beach is hard to say. The tide is surging in now so we’ve run out of time to search.

    A St Piran's crab foraging in the pool at Porth Mear
    A St Piran’s crab foraging in the pool at Porth Mear

    The existence of the St Piran’s crab is a fragile one; storms, temperature change, pollution and disturbance threaten our shore wildlife now more than ever. Richard’s survey provides an incredible conservation tool with its wealth of data about what’s here and how it changes.

    50 years on from the Torrey Canyon disaster, the confirmation of the St Piran’s crab’s comeback is an uplifting way to complete this survey (and the year).

    A Scorpion fish at Porth Mear
    A Scorpion fish at Porth Mear
    A rock goby
    A rock goby
    A brittle star on the move at Porth Mear.
    A brittle star on the move at Porth Mear.
    Xantho pilipes crab pretending to be a pebble at Porth Mear
    Xantho pilipes crab pretending to be a pebble at Porth Mear
    As the last tide of 2016 rushed in, I had to say aurevoir to this little St Piran's hermit crab. Hopefully they'll be sticking around in 2017.
    As the last tide of 2016 rushed in, I had to say au revoir to this little St Piran’s hermit crab. Hopefully they’ll be sticking around in 2017. Happy New Year!

     

     

  • The best of 2016 in Cornwall’s Rock Pools

    The best of 2016 in Cornwall’s Rock Pools

    In a year of turmoil in the human world, the colour and diversity of the Cornish rock pools have revived my spirits on every visit. While there’s much to be done about plastic waste, discarded fishing gear, pollution and other threats to our marine wildlife, the end of the year feels a good time to reflect on the positives.

    So, here are a few of my rockpool highlights from 2016… (and a scroll down for a video of a chough!)

    January

    Flat periwinkle in the Cornish rock pools
    Flat periwinkle in the Cornish rock pools

    Flat periwinkles are so common on the shore that I’m guilty of overlooking them. Taking a morning to watch them was a revelation. They’re colourful, industrious and surprisingly engaging. They’re well worth a look, especially on stormy winter days when the lower shore isn’t accessible.

    February

    Anapagurus hyndmanni hermit crab
    Anapagurus hyndmanni hermit crab

    On the first big tides of the year, I explored a new section of the rocky shore near Looe and found an amazing gully teeming with life. Among the cowries, sea squirts, sea slugs and crabs, I came across this gorgeous little hermit crab with one huge white-gloved claw, the Anapagurus hyndmanni.

    March

    Galathea strigosa - a squat lobster
    Galathea strigosa – a squat lobster

    In March the rock pools were bursting into life. Baby cat sharks were hatching in front of my eyes and other fish were busy laying their eggs. Among the rocks I spotted this Galathea strigosa squat lobster – a rare sight on my local beach. This one was only a few centimetres long, but its colours were fabulous.

    April

    Scarlet and gold cup coral
    Scarlet and gold cup coral

    In April I visited one of my favourite childhood beaches, Porth Mear near Porthcothan, with a group of North Devon naturalists. We recorded sea spiders, unusual crabs and had the most northerly sighting (at that time) of the St Piran’s Hermit crab, which has made a comeback around Cornwall in 2016. Best of all, we found a pool full of Scarlet and gold cup corals. These corals were way too small for my old camera to capture but this time I was better prepared.

    May

    Limacia clavigera sea slug
    Limacia clavigera sea slug

    The water was warming up nicely in May and little eyes were starting to look back at me from the fish eggs clustered under the rocks. Sea slugs were also making their way onto the shore and, as always, blowing me away with their colours. This yellow-clubbed sea slug (Limacia clavigera) was exploring the seaweed in West Looe and was a big hit with the children on our shore survey.

    June

    Clingfish eggs - with one newly-hatched fish (centre)
    Clingfish eggs – with one newly-hatched fish (centre)

    Under a shining sun, June was a fabulous month for rockpooling. What grabbed my attention most were the fish eggs. To the naked eye there’s not much to see, but with some help from my camera, I was looking into the fully-formed eyes of baby clingfish and seeing their spotted tails wrapped around their noses. In this photo there was even one recently-hatched baby among the crowd.

    July

    A juvenile turbot at Lundy Bay
    A juvenile turbot at Lundy Bay

    At the beginning of July, the Bioblitz at Lundy Bay saw perfect conditions, with a tompot blenny, moon jellyfish and even a slow worm among the beach finds. The high point for me was holding this tiny baby turbot – a flatfish – which had been found using nets in the sandy shallows.

    August

    Cornish Rock Pools Junior meets a bootlace worm
    Cornish Rock Pools Junior meets a bootlace worm

    During the school holidays, the more accessible sandy beaches are packed, but there’s often plenty of space on the rocky shore. I took Junior and his friends out to explore. On this day we saw jewel anemones, a stalked jellyfish and a butterfish, but our highlight was this bootlace worm. According to the Guinness Book of Records, it’s the world’s longest animal – this was just part of the one we found.

    September

    A male worm pipefish with eggs on his belly
    A male worm pipefish with eggs on his belly

    I joined a Shoresearch survey at Hannafore in early September and, as always, there was lots to see. Although they’re not uncommon on the shore, the pipefish are special creatures. They are close relatives of the seahorses. This male is carrying eggs in a special groove down his belly.

    October

    St Piran's Crab in Concarneau
    St Piran’s Crab in Concarneau

    In October I took a little ‘school trip’ to see our Celtic cousins in Brittany. I soon discovered that the ‘St Piran’s Crab’, which has reappeared in Cornwall this year after decades of absence, is the common species on the Breton shores. They’re so new to our shores that the only ones we see are tiny. The full-grown specimens were much easier to photograph – showing their equal-sized claws and white-spotted eyes.

    November

    Strawberry anemone basking in a brief moment of November sunshine
    Strawberry anemone basking in a brief moment of November sunshine

    In the last couple of months of the year I spent most of my time looking for stalked jellyfish in the pools, but I couldn’t help but be distracted by the sunshine falling on this strawberry anemone.

    December

    Cornish rockpool junior's first stalked jellyfish - Calvadosia cruxmelitensis
    Cornish rockpool junior’s first stalked jellyfish – Calvadosia cruxmelitensis

    Stalked jellyfish are relatively easy to see this time of year, when the seaweed has died back, but only if the conditions are calm and clear. During several calm days of spring tides this December I recorded dozens of these little gems in the rock pools. When the land is looking bare and brown in winter, there’s still no shortage of colour in the rock pools.

    I closed my year with a walk on my home beach of Mawgan Porth. As I watched sand gobies skidding away under a rock, an unmistakeable cry made me look up. On the clifftop just metres away, a solitary chough was feeding, plunging its scarlet deep into the turf. These birds were considered extinct here when I was a child on this beach, but now I’m able to show my son his first chough in the place I grew up.

    We came across a chough again at sunset and my other half took this video.

    What better sign could there be? 2017 will bring challenges for wildlife, but as long as there are enough people who take action, positive change is possible.

  • Christmas Rockpooling in Looe

    Christmas Rockpooling in Looe

    I doubt anyone in Looe can have missed it – the moment today when Cornish Rock Pools Junior found his first stalked jellyfish. His scream of, “I’ve actually found one!” rang across the beach and echoed off the hillside.

    Cornish rockpool junior's first stalked jellyfish - Calvadosia cruxmelitensis
    Cornish rockpool junior’s first stalked jellyfish – Calvadosia cruxmelitensis

    His first find was closely followed by his second, next to which was a third. A volunteer from Looe Marine Conservation Group found a fourth. The Natural England team found some more and by the time we were done we recorded a whopping 26 Stalked jellyfish.

    Calvadosia campanulata stalked jellyfish
    Calvadosia campanulata stalked jellyfish

    As all our records today were of two species (Calvadosia cruxmelitensis and Calvadosia campanulata) I’m feeling hopeful that they may soon be added as recognised features of the Looe and Whitsand Bay Marine Conservation Zone.

    Looe Marine Conservation Group volunteer, Dawn, finds her first Stalked jellyfish on our survey
    Looe Marine Conservation Group volunteer, Dawn, finds her first Stalked jellyfish on our survey

    In December, good tides, mild temperatures and low winds coincide about as often as it snows on the Cornish coast (i.e. about once every ten years). Amazingly, today was one of those rare occasions and the rockpools were in impressive festive colours. What could be more Christmassy than this Dahlia anemone?

    Festive colours in the Cornish rock pools - a Dahlia anemone
    Festive colours in the Cornish rock pools – a Dahlia anemone

    We were doing so well with our stalked jellyfish survey that I didn’t feel too bad about getting distracted. When I spotted a wriggling piece of seaweed, I chased it across the rocks.

    If a piece of seaweed runs off, it's probably a spider crab
    If a piece of seaweed runs off, it’s probably a spider crab

    As I suspected, under the seaweed decorations was a small spider crab species. This one was a Macropodia deflexa, a long-legged spider crab.

    A Macropodia deflexa crab - covered in seaweed decorations
    A Macropodia deflexa crab – covered in seaweed decorations

    Relying on their camouflage, scorpion fish were lying still among the seaweed, allowing us to come right up to them.

    A scorpion fish hides among the seaweed
    A scorpion fish hides among the seaweed

    It was a huge relief that everything turned out so well for our Stalked jellyfish survey. Had the conditions been less favourable we’d have been more likely to find none at all. 26 was an amazing total.

    I needed my hot chocolate afterwards, but it was an afternoon well spent with some fabulous people. And tomorrow the forecast is even better… I’ll let you know what I find!

    Another Christmas sea-flower - the Daisy anemone. In full bloom at Hannafore, Looe
    Another Christmas sea-flower – the Daisy anemone. In full bloom at Hannafore, Looe
    Like a string of Christmas lights - the Blue-rayed limpet
    Like a string of Christmas lights – the Blue-rayed limpet
    Our Stalked jellyfish survey at Hannafore Beach, West Looe
    Our Stalked jellyfish survey at Hannafore Beach, West Looe

     

  • Sharing the Love of Rockpooling

    Sharing the Love of Rockpooling

    This week I’m planning rockpooling events for next year and adding identification pages to my website….

    Yesterday it was so foggy you couldn’t see the sea in front of your wellies. Before that it was raining; before that it was blowing a gale and on the one day the sun came out I was nowhere near the beach. It’s not bad for eggcase hunts – which Cornish Rock Pools junior loves – but that’s about it.

    This time of year, when the short days and inclement weather make even die-hard rockpoolers like me reach for the duvet, I turn to flicking through the 2017 tide table and dreaming of sunny days and gleaming expanses of shore.

    Is it too early for New Year’s resolutions? Mine is to spend (even) more time sharing my love of rockpooling with others. I’ve put all the Looe Marine Conservation Group rockpooling events in my diary and I’m also hoping to volunteer with the utterly fabulous Fox Club (the junior branch of the Cornwall Wildlife Trust), helping to run events around the county. Then there will be other events for the local scouts and home educating groups to fit in, and who knows what else. (more…)

  • On a stalked jellyfish mission…

    On a stalked jellyfish mission…

     

    My local area is special and it’s partly down to some fabulous little jellies we find here.

    Looe and Whitsand Bay was one of the first to be designated a Marine Conservation Zone (MCZ) three years ago. Apparently Ocean quahog (a clam shell), pink sea fans, pink sea fan anemones and a stalked jellyfish species (Haliclystus sp.) can all be found here.

    As you'd expect, stalked jellyfish have a stalk which attaches to seaweed so they don't float around like other jellies. They have eight arms with tentacles on the end.
    As you’d expect, stalked jellyfish have a stalk which attaches to seaweed so they don’t float around like other jellies. They have eight arms with tentacles on the end.

    I’m hoping we can add more species to that list. There have been some local records of giant gobies, which are one of the MCZ ‘feature’ species and we’ve found three other species of stalked jellyfish on our beaches.

    The problem with stalked jellyfish is that they’re tiny and seaweed coloured. In theory, the winter die-back of seaweed makes them easier to see, but Cornish winters don’t often provide the calm conditions you need to spot stalked jellies. Consequently not many people see them and even fewer people record their discoveries on ORKS – so please, please do share your finds!

    In a quest to add more evidence that these species are present in significant numbers, I take Cornish Rock Pools Junior for a wander through the pools at a quiet local bay.

    Grey herons like fishing in this quiet bay - Plaidy beach, East Looe
    Grey herons like fishing in this quiet bay – Plaidy beach, East Looe

    I find it’s best to focus on nothing else if I’m going to find stalked jellies. The problem is, as anyone who’s seen me in the vicinity of a chocolate hobnob will know, that I have no willpower. So, I spend the first half hour snapping this gorgeous strawberry anemone as it stretches its tentacles towards the last of the autumn sunshine. (more…)

  • Home from Home: Quiberon in Brittany

    Home from Home: Quiberon in Brittany

    Things have been quiet on this page the last couple of months. Cornish Rock Pools Junior, Other Half and I took an extended holiday to visit the towns and beaches of Brittany. As always our travels had a bit of a marine theme…

    Est-ce que c’est un anémone?” the eager child in the dark-rimmed spectacles asks. We explain what a ‘stalked jellyfish’ is to the class of seven-year-olds. “Jellyfish!” they chant.

     

    Stalked jellyfish - a Lucernariopsis cruxmelitensis.
    Stalked jellyfish – a Lucernariopsis cruxmelitensis.

    Between fascinating excursions to the fire station and the sardine factory, we are giving impromptu English lessons to a class of primary school students during our twinning visit to Quiberon in Brittany.

     

    We have covered the words goby, crab, jellyfish and shark so far and there’s still a sea of raised hands. The children seem desperate to tell us about their finds around the shores of Quiberon. (more…)

  • Summer Lazing in Cornwall’s Rock Pools

    Summer Lazing in Cornwall’s Rock Pools

    It’s funny how the summer days float by. The house has been practically bursting with people for weeks now and I haven’t found the space to write about our many beach trips, but August still feels like a lazy month.

    It reminds me of my childhood summers; a jumble of paddling, swimming, rockpooling and finds. Only I’ve just turned 40 and now I’m the one remembering hats and towels, preparing picnics and being called on constantly to help build dams or identify creatures. Every few days I realise that I’ve failed to take many photos and still haven’t blogged anything I’ve found. It’s just the way August goes.

    Compass jellyfish. Also known as sea nettles as they pack quite a little sting, these jellyfish have beautiful markings.
    Compass jellyfish. Also known as sea nettles as they pack quite a little sting, these jellyfish have beautiful markings.

    The warm waters are drawing in all sorts of creatures at the moment. The north coast especially is teeming with jellyfish. Harmless Moon jellyfish have washed up in their thousands. These transparent little jellies have four mauve circles in their centre in a pattern that reminds me of cucumber slices (OK, that’s probably just me). 

    One of many moon jellyfish washed up by the strong swell. This species is harmless.
    One of many moon jellyfish washed up by the strong swell. This species is harmless.

    Other jellyfish that have mild stings, like the compass jellyfish are also washing in and I think my thigh met with one of the many blue jellies in the water at Mawgan Porth a couple of weeks ago from the unattractive rash I developed! On the plus side, some friends found a spiny starfish in a pool at the top of the mid-shore pools, which looked like it might be feeding on the stranded jellies. (more…)

  • The Calm Before the School Holidays

    The Calm Before the School Holidays

    Long sunny days, beaches and ice creams: there’s a lot to love about the school summer holidays in Cornwall. For us though, the influx of visitors makes it a challenge to go anywhere, whether on and off the beach. So, from the end of next week, Cornish Rock Pools junior and I will be adopting our much-loved summer routine of visiting remote local coves on foot. In the meantime, we have fun taking our friends to Hannafore beach to learn about sea creatures.

    It feels like the calm before the storm. It’s so calm, in fact, that a thick sea mist has settled over the bay. Looe Island, a few hundred metres away, has disappeared. With no waves and not a ripple on the pools, the conditions are ideal for rockpooling. The damp air also means the animals are active without fear of drying out. As we walk across the shore we see crabs scuttling in every direction.

    The fog has descended at Hannafore - Looe Island is nowhere to be seen.
    The fog has descended at Hannafore – Looe Island is nowhere to be seen.

    I’ve asked Junior to help me. He’s now spent so much time on the shore that he knows the health and safety spiel by heart and can identify crabs, fish and starfish in the blink of an eye. He takes on his role with unstoppable enthusiasm, telling his friends that they should look closely at the hermit crabs.

    “If you’re really lucky you might find a rare one like Anapagurus Hyndmanni,” he explains.

    It so happens that one of the first finds of the day is this very species, occupying a shell so small that my eyes ache from trying to focus on it. Despite its size, the Anapagurus hyndmanni is a feisty little crab, reaching as far out of the shell as it dares to threaten me with its miniscule pincers.

    Anapgurus hyndmanni - this uncommon little hermit crab is often seen at Hannafore.
    Anapgurus hyndmanni – this uncommon little hermit crab is often seen at Hannafore.

    Close-up, its right pincer looks inflated, like it’s wearing a white boxing glove.

    As always, the starfish are hugely popular with the children. We find cushion stars, brittle stars and a young spiny starfish and watch how they move.

    Children love holding starfish - when you turn them over it's easy to see how they move around on their tentacle feet.
    Children love holding starfish – when you turn them over it’s easy to see how they move around on their tentacle feet.

    A friend returns from a distant pool with a fish I don’t often see on the shore here: a butterfish. It’s instantly recognisable from its wonderful marbled patterns and dark spots along its flanks. By gently touching it the children find out that it gets its name from its slippery skin.

    A beautifully patterned young butterfish.
    A beautifully patterned young butterfish.
    The butterfish has a downturned mouth with big lips, making it look like it's frowning.
    The butterfish has a downturned mouth with big lips, making it look like it’s frowning.

    Among the rainbow weed at the end of the walkway we find a candy-stripe flatworm. It swims into my bucket and we watch it slipping along, feeling its way with its head tentacles.

    The candy stripe flatworm swims straight into my bucket.
    The candy stripe flatworm swims straight into my bucket.

    We find the usual array of crabs, squat lobsters, prawns and anemones. A member of the public donates a large velvet swimming crab to our big bucket. The crab is less than pleased about its capture and draws gasps from the children with its quick pincers and gleaming red eyes.

    Velvet swimming crabs - or devil crabs as Cornish Rock Pools Junior calls them - are impressively aggressive.
    Velvet swimming crabs – or devil crabs as Cornish Rock Pools Junior calls them – are impressively aggressive.

    A netted dog whelk also captures the kids’imaginations; its huge syphon reminds them of an elephant’s trunk.

    Netted dog whelks are common on this silty shore and have an impressively long syphon.
    Netted dog whelks are common on this silty shore and have an impressively long syphon.

    All too soon the tide turns and we slip the creatures back into the still water, watch them swim away and the children disperse to eat their picnics on the beach. It’s hard to imagine how busy the town and beaches will be a week or two from now. I enjoy the calm while I can.

    There will be lots of great family rockpooling events around Cornwall during the summer holidays – it’s the perfect way to find and learn about our fabulous wildlife. Take a look at the Cornwall Wildlife Trust’s events page for more dates of rockpooling and other marine wildlife events.

    Broad-clawed porcelain crab
    Broad-clawed porcelain crab

     

     

     

  • Fun and fish at the Lundy Bay Bioblitz

    Fun and fish at the Lundy Bay Bioblitz

    Bioblitzes have become a regular thing these last few years and I love them. These time-limited surveys of every living thing in an area are a fantastic way to bring experts and the public together, so I’m excited to join the Lundy Bay 24 hour bioblitz organised by the National Trust.

    Getting started on the beach with at the Lundy Bay bioblitz
    Getting started on the beach with at the Lundy Bay bioblitz

    When I first walk down on the first afternoon to do a pre-survey recce there’s no beach at all. The tide is high and the waves are exploding against the rocks sending up a shower of spray that delights Cornish Rock Pools Junior. Fortunately, some intrepid friends from the Marine Biological Association and Coastwise North Devon arrived early and collected a lovely hydroid medusa (like a tiny jellyfish) and lots of moon jellies – so it seems likely there will be interesting things to find when the tide goes back out.

    One of many moon jellyfish washed up by the strong swell. This species is harmless.
    One of many moon jellyfish washed up by the strong swell. This species is harmless.

    After an exciting evening and early morning of mammal surveying with Junior, I finally get to see the beach at low tide. It’s an exposed shore with sheer rocks and golden sand, which looks wonderful, but is a tricky environment to find creatures. Still, with the number of people we have taking part and the combined resources of lots of different organisations including kick nets and fish traps, we’re sure to find something.

    I spend most my time near the event flags, helping people to identify their finds. Everyone is fascinated by the sea hare. These common sea slugs are easily recognised by the long tentacle ‘ears’ on their heads. Up close, you can see a leopard-like pattern on their bodies. If you upset them (which we don’t) they can squirt out purple ink to confuse predators.

    A small sea hare explores my tray.
    A small sea hare explores my tray.

    The find of the day is a creature none of us expect to find tangled in a discarded fishing net. This slow worm (a legless lizard) probably came down to the beach to hunt at low tide and became caught in the ghost net. It has a lucky escape and is released safely.

    This slow worm was found tangled in discarded fishing gear.
    This slow worm was found tangled in discarded fishing gear.

    The nets bring up lots of tiny baby flatfish that were hiding in the sand in the shallows. Most are probably plaice and this one looks like a baby turbot – with a much wider body-shape. I’ve never seen one this small before, it swims onto my hand and rests there, looking around with bulging eyes, opening its lop-sided mouth a little. If it makes it to adulthood it may eventually weigh 10 kilos or more, but it has a way to go yet.

    A tiny young turbot swims into my hand.
    A tiny young turbot swims into my hand.

     Everyone loves a cheeky tompot blenny. There bold fish are unmistakeable with their fat lips, colourful eyes and television aerial style tentacles on their heads.

    A tompot blenny giving its typical toothy smile.
    A tompot blenny giving its typical toothy smile.

    Other highlights include toothed crabs (Primela denticulate), celtic sea slugs, which are present in huge numbers on some large rocks around the point, and a lobster lurking at the back of a deep overhang cave.

    Built like miniature tanks, the Celtic sea slugs cover the rocks in places.
    Built like miniature tanks, the Celtic sea slugs cover the rocks in places.

    After the strong winds and rain of the previous day, the sunshine takes us by surprise. Conditions are perfect and the turnout is good, but before long the tide is racing back in. By the time we make it back to base, the short, intense Bioblitz is coming to an end and the stands are being packed away. Soon this will be a remote empty field again, but I’ll be back sometime soon to explore this wonderful bay some more.

    If you would like to join a Bioblitz there’s another one coming up in North Devon on 17th September at Croyde with the fabulous Coastwise North Devon team – see http://www.coastwisenorthdevon.org.uk/news/summerbioblitz-time.html

  • Kynance Cove: A rock pooling challenge

    Kynance Cove: A rock pooling challenge

    There are many fabulous rock pooling beaches around Cornwall and this isn’t one of them. The smooth serpentinite rocks of Kynance Cove on the Lizard peninsula are colourful and create breathtaking scenery, but they’re mostly devoid of places for creatures to shelter. Realistically there’s not much here, but it’s one of Cornwall’s loveliest places and experience tells me there’s always something if I look hard enough.

    It's easy to see the snake-skin texture that gives serpentine rock its name.
    It’s easy to see the snakeskin texture that gives serpentine rock its name.

    One thing this beach does have is caves. Junior strides ahead of me, clutching a geological hammer and chisel, shining his torch along the smooth, damp walls.

    Cornish rock pools junior explores the serpentinite caves
    Cornish rock pools junior explores the serpentinite caves

    He’s on a mission to explore every centimetre of these rare rocks, forced up millions of years ago from deep under the oceans, exposing the upper layer of Earth’s mantle. While Junior hammers away at history, cave-dwelling periwinkles not much bigger than grape pips are undertaking their own explorations.

    This tiny periwinkle species lives on the upper shore in dark and damp places such as this cave.
    This tiny periwinkle species lives on the upper shore in dark and damp places such as this cave.

    A steady swell breaks against the island stacks and scattered rocks of the bay. Barnacles cling to imperfections and overhangs, joined by beadlet anemones and black-footed limpets.

    A beadlet anemone next to dog whelk eggs. Barnacles and limpets also cling on to this small overhang in the smooth serpentinite.
    A beadlet anemone next to dog whelk eggs. Barnacles and limpets also cling on to this small overhang in the smooth serpentinite.

    I watch a limpet slamming down its shell on a barnacle’s feeding arms and wonder if it’s if it’s after a more substantial meal than its usual fare of micro-algae?

    Sea slaters scuttle among the barnacles together with occasional flies and even a centipede. I assume it has journeyed down from the top of the grassy island to forage at low tide.

    A centipede visiting the shore
    A centipede visiting the shore

    An oystercatcher watches me cross the beach, preening itself with its orange chopstick bill. It watches as I climb a shelving part of the lower cliffs where several deep bowls have been eroded from the rock.

    A lone oystercatcher on a rock at Kynance Cove.
    A lone oystercatcher on a rock at Kynance Cove.

    As I approach the pools, a gaggle of small fish jostles against each other before darting away below a ledge. I take up position beside the pool and wait. Sure enough, after a few minutes, a shanny’s head pops over the ledge, propping itself on its clawed pectoral fins to get a better look. Others soon join it as they return to their basking positions at the shallow edges of the pool.

    A grinning shanny propped on its pectoral fins watches me from a rock pool.
    ‘Say cheese!’ A grinning shanny propped on its pectoral fins watches me from a rock pool.

    I lower my camera bit by bit until it’s almost touching the surface of the water. The fearless shanny stays put. After a few attempts I manage to capture one of my favourite things about these common little rockpool fish: their extraordinary chameleon-like eyes which can swivel independently in all directions.

    Being able to do this must be a huge advantage when looking out for prey and predators.

    I spot a Montagu’s blenny in the pool, easily distinguished from its larger cousins by its radio mast style headgear. It’s too shy to have its photo taken and I’m called away to help with  Junior’s mining exploits, but it’s been a rewarding morning. It shows how much is there if you look.

    Barnacles on a beautiful piece of banded serpentinite.
    Barnacles on a beautiful piece of banded serpentinite.