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The Turtle Pinnacles
Howard Hall

Turtle Cleaned - ©Howard Hall |
Doug Perrine, Michele, and I slipped off the side
of Doug’s Boston Whaler and dropped down into the clear
Hawaiian water. I began swimming west with my awkward high
definition video camera followed by Doug and Michele with
their still cameras. After a few seconds of swimming slowly
forty feet below the surface, the larger of the two Turtle
Pinnacles materialized against the dark blue background. I
recognized the Pinnacle immediately and a moment later the
smaller secondary pinnacle just to the south. And I recognized
the twenty-foot rubble-filled channel that separated the two
small spires. It had been more than ten years since I had
last been to this spot. That I recognized the spot easily
after so many years immediately filled me with nostalgia and
joy.
Doug had warned us that green turtles seemed to visit
the Pinnacles less frequently than when I last filmed them
in 1993. Back then I was using a 16mm movie camera to capture
marine wildlife behavior for a series we produced for PBS
called Secrets of the Ocean Realm. Doug said that, if anything,
there were more turtles in the waters off Kona than a decade
before. But he also suggested that the popularity of the Turtle
Pinnacles with local sport divers had caused the turtles go
elsewhere much of the time. I was thinking about what Doug
had said as I approached the channel between the two Pinnacles.
But just as I began to worry, a large green turtle caught
my attention as it approached from the south and disappeared
behind the smaller Pinnacle. Michele saw the big reptile too
and together we swam over the top of the Pinnacle to watch
the turtle. But when we reached the top and looked over to
the other side, the turtle was gone. How can that be? The
water was clear yet the turtle seemed to have vanished. I
scanned the area around the Pinnacle looking for the turtle.
He was nowhere in sight. I looked over at Michele and she
just shrugged. But as I drifted down to the bottom I noticed
a cave at the base of the Pinnacle. Sure enough the turtle
was in the cave. He was fast asleep. I pointed him out to
Michele as Doug swam over to have a quick look. The turtle
was out cold.
A sleeping turtle was not the subject we had in
mind. Unfortunately, the fact that Michele and I had traveled
all the way from California, subjected ourselves to the modern
horrors of negotiating airports with fifteen boxes of heavy
equipment, and had invested a considerable amount of money
to film green sea turtle behaviors, was a fact that could
not have mattered less to the unconscious turtle. As Michele
and Doug swam off looking for subjects to capture with their
still cameras, I swam to the top of the larger Pinnacle and
began scanning the surrounding reef for other turtles.
The Turtle Pinnacles off the Kona Coast of Hawaii
is one of those rare and wonderful places where something
really special happens. In the early morning hours green sea
turtles come to this one special spot to rest and be cleaned
by herbivorous reef fish. When a turtle approaches the Pinnacles,
dozens of yellow tangs, convict tangs, and bluelipped surgeonfish
dash up from the reef and begin feeding on algae that has
accumulated on the turtle’s shell. As the turtle settles
to the reef, more tangs and surgeonfish gather and soon every
inch of the turtle is covered with grazing fish from the tip
of the turtle’s beak to the tip of its tail. It’s
one of the most beautiful examples of symbiotic behavior I
have ever seen. And ten years ago it happened every day off
Kona, right outside the harbor. The behavior was so predictable
that local divers tend to take it for granted. There are other
places in Hawaii where turtles are seen being cleaned by reef
fish. But nowhere is the behavior as predictable or spectacular
as at the Turtle Pinnacles. At least that’s how it used
to be. A lot can change and usually does after ten years.
I had been hovering over the top of the larger Pinnacle
for about fifteen minutes, conserving air, conserving bottom
time, and wondering if the turtles no longer came to the Pinnacles
to be cleaned when I saw the second turtle swimming toward
the cleaning station. It swam slowly over the reef as it approached.
As I watched the turtle approaching the Pinnacles, I watched
it swim over dozens of yellow tangs and bluelipped surgeonfish
all of which showed absolutely no interest in the turtle.
But just as the turtle passed the Pinnacle and moved over
the rubble channel, the behavior of the tangs and surgeonfish
beneath it changed. They left the reef, rushed up to the turtle
and began grazing on its shell. I wondered what was so special
about this small area. Why did the fish recognize turtles
as a willing food resource here and not twenty yards away?
Were the fish right here different; having learned generation
after generation that turtles carried a shell covered in tasty
algae? And did these “educated” fish never travel
more than a few yards from these Pinnacles? Or was there some
change in the turtles’ behavior as they approached the
Pinnacles, something so subtle I couldn’t see it? Or
was it something about the place itself, something that was
recognized by both turtle and fish as making this place special?
I watched the small turtle settle on the reef as
more fish crowded over its shell feeding voraciously. As I
dropped down to film the cleaning frenzy, something caught
my attention on the other side of the Pinnacle. The large
turtle that had been sleeping in the cave was awake and moving
away across the reef. Just ten yards from where the smaller
turtle was being enthusiastically cleaned, the larger turtle
was totally ignored by the tangs and surgeonfish.
I knelt on the rubble, steadied my camera and triggered
the run switch. Then I watched the video image in the viewfinder
as eager yellow tangs covered the turtle’s shell. A
bluelipped surgeonfish cleaned the skin on the turtle’s
head and the turtle closed its eye in ecstasy as the fish
cleaned above the reptile’s eyelid. It was beautiful,
colorful, and wonderful. I have never seen anything like it
anywhere else.
Three turtles visited the Pinnacles that morning
and each was serviced well by reef fish. I had captured a
very nice sequence for my stock footage library, but more
importantly, I learned that the cleaning behavior at the Turtle
Pinnacles was still active, essentially unchanged since my
last visit more than ten years ago. There are very few places
in the ocean where wildlife populations and behaviors have
remained unchanged for so long especially in this age of accelerated
over-fishing and ocean warming. I was very encouraged, especially
because in April I will be back. And in April my crew and
I will attempt to film this wonderful behavior with the massive
IMAX 3D camera. If we succeed, this behavior could produce
unforgettable images for our film, Denizens of the Deep.
As I watched the turtle being cleaned in my video
viewfinder, I tried to imagine this colorful and fascinating
image hovering three feet away in an IMAX 3D theater as children
reach out to touch it and being amazed to find nothing there.
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