Category: Fish


While diving this morning, I came across a kelp greenling couple while they were courting (Hexagrammos decagrammus).

In addition to being fascinated by the courtship behaviour, I was struck by the intense colouration, especially of the courting male.

Mature male and female kelp greenlings look very different but I had never fully realized how their gender specific colour intensifies during courtship.

Mature males are blue/brown with blue patches but the colour of the head and eyes appears so much more stunning when the male is courting.

This 1.5 minute slideshow / video at this link shows the colouration and the courtship behaviour. Enjoy! (If having trouble viewing, choose a smaller video size at top of video’s page).


Nature gave us sockeye salmon this year. A red-scaled, bounding life source, some 34 million fish strong.

This has led to human voices shouting out in all from gratitude to greed; from delight to denial.

Predictably, sadly, there have been far too many who have been at the “greedy denial” end of the spectrum. I will not tire you with that here though.

I want to fish out two voices of sanity from the ocean of opinions. One voice is that of reporter Stephen Hume from the Vancouver Sun. The other is nine-year-old Avery Walker who I am privileged to have as a member of my Northern Vancouver Island Young Naturalists’ Club.

Stephen Hume, award-winning author,  in The Vancouver Sun: “Columnists who apparently wouldn’t know the difference between a sockeye and a sculpin cluck and scold in a Toronto newspaper. One enthusiastically advances the argument that we should whack 30 million of the 34 million returning salmon . . . . . Instead of permitting a lust for instant gratification to derail a natural process for rebuilding small stocks, now is the time for restraint, for harvest restraint is a critical investment in future abundance. So enjoy your sockeye. Be grateful for this gift from nature. But don’t let the gong show of greed sway us from good stewardship.”

Avery Walker - Salmon Superstar. Photo by Larry Walker and Anna Marchand.

Avery Walker, 9-year-old Young Naturalist, with his prize-winning submission to the Wild Salmon Circle’s “Spawning Ideas” contest: “I fish only with barbless hooks, I’ve taken all the treble hooks from the all the buzzbombs I have and replaced them with single barbless hooks. I don’t jig the fish, I fish the ones who bite. Sometimes this is really hard to do, because not all of my friends fish like this, and so they sometimes take home more fish than I do. I abide by the regulations about which salmon I can keep and which ones I can’t. I never go over my limit. Or keep undersized fish. Most of the time, I catch and release. I love to fish, and I want to be able to do it forever.”

Thank you Avery. Thank you Stephen. Thank you all who make choices that may allow us to have  . . . fish forever.

For insights into the need for precaution in managing the harvesting and threats to the Fraser River sockeye, please click here for information from “Save Our Salmon”.

The image below is of a Pacific blue shark (Prionace glauca) being rescued by Lindsey Pattinson of Tiderip Grizzly Tours on July 15th in Glendale Cove, British Columbia.

Lindsey Pattinson rescuing a blue shark. Photo: Nick and Sue Spiller.

Many British Columbians are unaware that we have at least 12 species of shark among us, ranging from the smaller species such as the spiny dogfish up to the 6-gill shark (5 m+) and the very, very rare basking shark (9 m+). The beautiful blue shark reaches a maximum of 3.8 meters and is distinct in its deep blue colouration and slender shape.

The blue shark is common in B.C. and is, in fact, extremely far ranging and widespread. It is found from Alaska to Chile in the Pacific but is also present in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans.  It has been found in waters from 7 to 16°C, latitudes of 60°N to 50°S and from the shallows to depths of 350 m (being more often at depth in warmer waters).

In researching the species after Lindsey’s find, I discovered that blue sharks undertake very large migrations, reportedly up to 9,200 km, moving north in the summer months.  More females than males move to the higher latitudes.

But, of course a sighting like this in Glendale Cove is an enormous rarity. Even with the blue shark being common in B.C., they are more often oceanic, on the continental shelf . . . not on the beach in Glendale!

For whatever reason, the animal stranded there and Lindsey cared enough to do what he could to save it.  Many shark species need to keep swimming in order to have oxygen-rich water pass over their gills. Knowing this, Lindsey moved the stranded shark back and forth in the water, forcing water over its gills and indeed, he revived it. He and the tourists he was guiding on the Grizzly Bear (and shark) watching trip had the joy of watching the animal swim to depth.

Thanks to Lindsey, this blue shark will be able to have more days of feeding on anchovy, mackerel, salmon, hake, dogfish, crustaceans and squid. It may also scavenge here and there and even feed on aggregations of krill by straining the water in the way a baleen whale would.

I suspect the Glendale Cove shark was a female and with blue sharks being a very prolific species, now saved, she could go on to bear 25 to 50 pups at a time (apparently even as many as 135)!  These young would grow inside her as the blue shark is “viviparous”, meaning they bear fully formed young. The pups are 35 to 44 cm at birth.

I was fascinated to learn that blue shark females can apparently “get pregnant” up to 20 months AFTER mating. They can store sperm packets in special glands in their reproductive tract called “shell glands” (aka nidamental glands) and pass their eggs through these glands to get fertilized.

If the rescued blue shark was indeed female, she may not have been able to feel much of Lindsey’s caring touch since the females are up to 3 times thicker skinned that the males! This adaptation is believed to allow the females to deal with the males since there is a lot of biting during courtship.

Unfortunately, the fate of blue sharks can also be to become the bycatch of longline and driftnet fisheries. One source reported that in one year alone (1990) “it is conservatively estimated that by-catch of blue sharks taken by the Japanese squid fleet in the North Pacific totaled 700,000.”

Further life history: Males sexually mature at 4–6 and females at 5–7 years. Believed to live to age 20.

For more photos of the blue shark rescue, click here.
Great thanks to Nick and Sue Spiller for sharing these photos.

Sources include:

Juvenile yellow-tail rockfish.

Recently, I noticed a lot of splashing in a tideline off Telegraph Cove, BC. I share my observations with you via the little video clip at the link below.

You’ll note that it looks like big rain drops are hitting the water.

I discovered that what was creating the splashing were juvenile yellow-tail rockfish feeding on zooplankton. The zooplankton, including a small species of krill, had been concentrated at the surface by the big tidal exchange. There had been almost a 4 metre exchange between high and low tide (more than 12 feet).

I also discovered a very unique larval fish in the tideline that day but will share that discovery in a future “The Marine Detective”.

Click here for the video of the yellow-tail rockfish feeding in the tideline.

Enjoy!

Scalyhead sculpins are a tiny fish but the males have a giant parenting role.

Scalyhead sculpin super dad (+/-10 cm)

I found what I believe were this species’ eggs while guiding a recent beach study (with Mr. Barfoot’s class from Robert Scott Elementary, Port Hardy, BC).

To share this information, and my photos, I’ve tried something new. At the link below, you’ll find a slideshow that I have narrated to explain how scalyhead sculpins are super dads.

Yes, that’s right, you get to hear my voice this week (oh-so-human stumbled speech and all!). Please realize I am speaking as I would to a +/- 10 year old.

Let me know what you think.  I so value you following along on these marine adventures.

Click here for scalyhead sculpin photos and the narrated slideshow – “Who’s Your Daddy?”

Photo by Glen Miller

In December, Glen and I had many marine adventures in Fiji. The link below takes you to our incredibly privileged experience in seeing manta rays while diving off Kaduva Island with the dive crew from the Matava Eco-Resort. It is thanks to their environmental ethic of this team that these dives are very controlled to make sure the animals are disturbed as little as possible.

The video allows us to share all the observations listed below as well as giving you the chance to laugh when you hear my underwater screams of joy when the mantas break from their feeding behaviour, get into a formation of 5 animals and swim by us 4 times!  I didn’t even realize I was making these sounds but Glen was there behind me, capturing it on video.

The video also shows:

  • That manta rays are big animals. They are the biggest rays in fact; up to almost 7 m across and more than 1,000 kg.  The ones we saw are probably about 4 m across.
  • They are very “alien” looking animals.  They feed on plankton and small fish and can scoop more food using the two big paddle-shaped flaps (“cephalic lobes”) that are just to the inside of their eyes. You will see from the murkiness of the water that it is thick with plankton.  The circular diving pattern of the mantas is believed to help them concentrate the plankton.
  • That manta rays have a relatively short tail for a ray, no stinging spine and you’ll see one animal in the video that has had their tail shredded off, likely by a tiger shark.
  • That sometimes there are remoras attached to the manta rays. These fish may help in removing parasites and have the benefit of transportation, being less visible to predators and possibly getting some scraps as snacks.
  • That mantas are incredibly graceful, having very flattened bodies and big wing-like fins.
  • They can be told apart as individuals. Of course the one with the shark injury is easy to tell apart from the others. There is also one that has had its left fin tip bitten off.  But if you look even more closely, you’ll see that each animal has unique markings on their upper and undersides. We passed on our photographs and video for research but, even though they are easy to tell apart, so little is known about them.
  • They are intelligent and coordinate their movements. This is what I found the most fascinating of all, how they knew to all get into a line at the same time and as each of them came by, they were observing me.  They pivoted their eyes back to get the longest look possible at the strange creature who couldn’t stop from screaming out in sheer amazement.

Click here to see our 8.5 minute video and some related photos.

Click here to see a great webpage for more manta ray information.

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