Artificial reefs attract sea life and create a habitat for them. Many different marine species call reefs their home. There are many reasons to build artificial reefs because they are important in many ways.Īrtificial reefs attract a wide variety of marine life. In the 17th century, Japan built artificial reefs to increase fish yields. Persians built an artificial reef to deter pirates. Other artificial reefs are a result of shipwrecks or construction debris.Īrtificial reefs have been around since ancient times. Some artificial reefs are created to promote marine life in certain areas, improve surfing, and provide other benefits. Both natural and artificial reefs are places where diverse marine life thrives.
To donate to Reef Guardians Hawai‘i go to can all agree that everyone enjoys a place they can feel comfortable to call home, and marine life is no exception. Terry Lilley is a marine biologist living in Hanalei and co-founder of Reef Guardians Hawai‘i, a nonprofit on a mission to provide education and resources to protect the coral reef.
When you catch the fish and take it out of the water its purple tail turns black! And, by the way, the black-tail snapper does not have a black tail! Its tail is actually purple, but I am sure that 3,000 years ago when it was named, fishermen did not have scuba tanks, masks and dive lights like I do, so the fish looked like it had a black tail when you look down on it from a cliff up above the waves.
Hawaiian reef fish toau movie#
You can see to‘au in action in my underwater educational movie “The World’s Guide To Hawaiian Reef Fish” up on my web at. Eating a tiny piece of fish containing ciguatera will only cause a mild stomach ache for a while so you will know not to eat the whole fish, which could make you go to the hospital. I always just eat a very tiny piece of the fish when I catch it and wait until the next day to eat the whole fish or give it away. Ciguatera is a neurotoxin, and it will make you sick within three to five hours after eating it. Since I spear fish, I often spear and eat to‘au to try and reduce their numbers to give the native fish a chance to come back, but I am always cautious about when I eat the fish. The information about the toxic, black-tailed snappers from Kane‘ohe spread all over Hawai‘i, and people stopped catching them, and now they have taken over the reef system. The fish is really good to eat and a very sustainable fish to feed the community, but when it was introduced into Kane‘ohe Bay the fish that were caught for food often carried ciguatera fish poisoning, which made the local fishermen sick! Scientific studies over the past 20 years have shown that ciguatera comes from an algae species that grows in Kane‘ohe Bay, but the to‘au caught from other parts of Hawai‘i very seldom carry any ciguatera and are good to eat. In Bora Bora, if you go to a restaurant and have fresh-caught snapper you usually will be served to‘au. The black-tail snapper in Mo‘orea is very common and the primary fish that is caught to feed the community. I did a scuba dive at Makua Thursday and counted over 100 to‘au and not one aweoweo or kumu!Īs a general rule, transplanting nonnative marine life from one country to another is not good because that new species is likely to change the entire marine ecosystem that took many thousands of years to evolve.
This turned out to be a huge mistake, because the fish now has taken over the reef habitat all throughout the main Hawaiian islands and has out competed the native Hawaiian fish like the aweoweo and kumu.įorty years ago, fishermen at Makua Reef in Kaua‘i (Tunnels) could always catch the abundant native red fish that lived in the lava tubes off the edge of the reef, but now the to‘au have taken over that habitat. To‘au is not their Hawaiian name, but it is their Tahitian name, as this fish species was introduced in 1956 from French Polynesia into Kane‘ohe Bay in O‘ahu by the state. They are more active at night when they are out feeding, and the black-tail snappers are known to move from reef to reef, often migrating due to the season of large surf. This fish grows to be about a foot long, and during the day hangs out in caves or near the bottom, often in large schools. To‘au is one of the most-common fish species in the Hawaiian islands, and almost every diver will see them near the rocky reef during a dive from 10 feet deep to about 40 feet deep.