Sunday, October 13, 2024
HomeScuba DivingThe Trees of the Coral Jungle

The Trees of the Coral Jungle

01 - Lead Sea fan _Walt StearnsRed sea fan and fish with landscape | Photo: Walt Stearns

The saying “can’t see the forest for the trees” refers to a person’s tendency to focus on the details to the point of missing the big picture.

Divers certainly have no problem seeing the big picture at Wakatobi. The waters reveal a vast landscape of coral jungle. Sometimes, however, it is the details of the seemingly infinite collection of marine organisms – from fish life to the smallest of invertebrates – living within the corals and sponges that are easily overlooked. Some are well camouflaged, but many more are simply small, and lost amid the colors and activity of the surrounding reefs.

In order to really grasp the depth of the coral jungle as you admire the underwater landscape, it can be rewarding to slow down and focus on the trees—or in this case the trees of the coral jungle, sea fans.

02 Sea fan _Walt Stearns_MG_5031Large orange sea fan on reef at Wakatobi | Photo: Walt Stearns

If a tropical reef could be considered a coral jungle, the sea fans would definitely be the trees. Some sea fans grow as large as 4 meters in diameter, and while they are listed as coral, technically they are not true reef-building corals. True corals, sometimes called stony corals, produce a hard calcium-based skeleton as they grow. Sea fans, along with sea whips, are Gorgonians, a colonial cnidarian with individual tiny polyps that generate a flexible skeleton like the branches of a tree rather than a hard, stony base.

One thing you can be sure of is that sea fans will grow with the broad side of their ‘fan’ oriented to prevailing currents. This maximizes their polyp’s ability to snare microorganisms from the water as it flows though the fan. For the host of small animals that take residence on the fan’s branches, this prime real estate makes food gathering easy without drawing attention.

03_Sea Whip_Mark SnyderRed Sea Whip | Photo: Mark Snyder

There are about 500 species of Gorgonians in the world’s oceans, most are found primarily in shallow waters. Of course shallow to a gorgonian is anywhere between 2 and 200-feet deep. Some are long and whip like to even bushy, like this lush orange sea whip growing on the side of the wall on Wakatobi’s House Reef.

Wakatobi Purple Sea FanPurple tall Sea fan | Photo: Warren Baverstock

It’s hard not to get passionate about sea fans when there are so many in vibrant hues like this tall purple beauty at Fan Garden, a site that truly lives up to its name.

While some Gorgonians contain symbiotic zooxanthellae algae (usually characterized by brownish colored polyps), which assist corals in getting nutrition via photosynthesis (the sun), those without zooxanthellae usually have more brightly colored polyps. Hence, sea fans of this nature ten to sport an array of vibrant color schemes – from purple, red, pink, and orange to rich yellows and gold.

05-Diver and Sea fan_Walt StearnsDiver and sea fan with crinoids | Photo: Walt Stearns

The size, shape, and appearance of sea fans are highly correlated with their location. The more fan-shaped, flexible types of gorgonians tend to populate shallower areas with strong currents, while the taller, thinner, and stiffer branched relatives typically dwell in deeper, calmer waters.

Like some trees, sea fans are extremely slow growing and can take hundreds of years to reach a good size. A sea fan’s world can involve a complicated set of bedfellows, and just like a big tree, a large sea fan is often home to a long list of animal life – from the more obvious like the numerous crinoids (seven to be exact) and sponges on this beautiful specimen at Lorenz’s Delight, a popular site at Wakatobi, to the tiniest of fish and invertebrates. Often within the crinoid there are one or more invertebrates like crinoid squat lobsters; a fascinating trait of this critter is that it can take on the same color pattern of the host crinoid.

06 Hawkfish_Frank OwensLongnose Hawkfish | Photo: Frank Owens

There are a large variety of fish living within the sea fan’s branches. One of the more notable and photogenic residents is the Longnose hawkfish. At Wakatobi Longnose hawkfish are found resting on the branches or in the midst of a sea fan as they seek the high ground to survey their surroundings. Perched from a good vantage point, like a hawk on an outstretched tree branch, they dart out to grab small crustaceans or other invertebrates, as well as fish swimming by. Sadly, one of their favored meals is the pygmy seahorse.

Pygmy SeahorseOrange pygmy seahorse in sea fan | Photo: Richard Smith

Since we’re on the subject of the diminutive members of the Syngnathidae family, four of the seven species of pygmy seahorse are found at Wakatobi. And two of these are solely dependent on gorgonians, living their entire adult lives on a single sea fan; the Bargibant’s and the Denise’s, pictured here, look like an extension of the brilliant orange network of the sea fan’s branches. Isn’t camouflage evolution wonderful?

With most pygmies reaching less than 1cm from head to toe, a sharp eye is required to witness this amazing spectacle. That’s when the assistance of an eagle-eyed dive guide really pays off.

08- Pygmy triples_Maurine ShimlockThree pygmy seahorses in fan on site known as Lorenz’s Delight | Photo: Maurine Shimlock

These little darlings of the sea fan are marvelously camouflaged – often having the same color and texture as the branches of their home. If pygmies feel threatened they are known to turn their backs to anything that approaches, making them even harder to distinguish from the fan’s tiny polyps. Patience and making slow and deliberate movements is always recommended for a positive view of this celebrity.

Do you see all THREE Bargibant’s pygmy seahorses in this picture? If not, look again, they’re there!

09- Ghost pipefish_walt stearnsOrnate Ghost pipefish | Photo: Walt Stearns

Sea fans also harbor a close relative of the pygmy seahorse, the ornate ghost pipefish. Also small and highly colorful, the ornate, aka harlequin ghost pipefish, are regular sea fan dwellers and rank among the most exotic creatures in the Indo-Pacific. Their spike-shaped fin rays give them a jagged appearance like the arms of a crinoid. In addition to finding them hovering close to the crinoid’s arms, they will also make themselves indistinctive by drafting off the waving motion of a sea fan as it sways in the current.

10- Brittle star on sea fan_Steve MillerBrittle Star on sea fan | Photo: Steve Miller

Sometimes mistaken as juvenile crinoids, brittle stars will often stay fixed to one spot on the arms of a sea fan during the daylight hours. When the sun goes down they will move about the fan, and even leave it, as they search for food. As nocturnal feeders, they will return to the fan when the sun comes up.

Wakatobi 2011Squid on sea fan | Photo: Wayne MacWilliams

The sea fan’s billowy branches also serve as effective sanctuaries for hosts of other sea creatures during the their juvenile development. Some of the most tantalizing finds for those with a keen eye are baby cuttlefish and squid that are no bigger than a grain of rice. Without using the sea fan’s protective forest of branches this little guy would more easily become somebody’s fast food lunch.

So, next time you are on the reef feeling the need to take in the forest, the big picture, simply explore a lone sea fan or two. Look closely, branch by branch, and see what wonders it may be harboring; you just may find you’ve grasped an even bigger picture of the coral jungle’s ecosystem.

Walt Stearns
Walt Stearns
Knowledgeable in boating, sport fishing, diving and marine natural history, Walt Stearns has earned the reputation as one of the world’s most credible photo-journalists and consultants in marine-related broadcast, print and online media.

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