Station Race Rocks Lightstation | |||||||
Month: June | Year: 2016 | ||||||
Observer Lester B. Pearson College of the Pacific | |||||||
Date | Time | Sea | Jar | Hydro- meter No. | Observed Density | YSI Salinity | YSI Temp °C |
Temp. | Temp. | ||||||
°C | °C | ||||||
1 | 14:10 | 32.2 | 10.9 | ||||
2 | 13:19 | 32.1 | 11.0 | ||||
3 | 17:15 | 32.1 | 11.4 | ||||
4 | 18:15 | 31.9 | 11.2 | ||||
5 | 18:45 | 32.3 | 11.1 | ||||
6 | 20:30 | 32.3 | 10.2 | ||||
7 | 19:00 | 32.8 | 10.2 | ||||
8 | 20:00 | 33.1 | 9.8 | ||||
9 | 21:00 | 32.5 | 10.4 | ||||
10 | 20:30 | 32.4 | 10.5 | ||||
11 | 21:00 | 32.2 | 10.7 | ||||
12 | 21:00 | 32.2 | 10.9 | ||||
13 | 21:00 | 32.0 | 10.7 | ||||
14 | 21:20 | 29.6 | 11.4 | ||||
15 | 21:10 | 30.2 | 11.6 | ||||
16 | 20:50 | 29.8 | 11.5 | ||||
17 | 21:00 | 30.2 | 11.8 | ||||
18 | 20:45 | 30.7 | 11.2 | ||||
19 | 21:50 | 30.7 | 11.4 | ||||
20 | 20:40 | 11.6 | 11.8 | 10,802 | 1.023 | 30.8 | 11.3 |
21 | 21:00 | 30.6 | 11.7 | ||||
22 | 20:45 | 31.2 | 11.1 | ||||
23 | 20:45 | 31.0 | 11.6 | ||||
24 | 20:00 | 31.5 | 10.9 | ||||
25 | 20:45 | 31.0 | 10.9 | ||||
26 | 21:00 | 30.8 | 12.3 | ||||
27 | 20:30 | 30.7 | 12.5 | ||||
28 | 20:45 | 31.1 | 11.7 | ||||
29 | 21:00 | 31.2 | 11.3 | ||||
30 | 21:20 | 30.6 | 11.5 | ||||
31 | |||||||
Submitted monthly to: Inst. Ocean Science, P.O. Box 6000, Sidney, B.C. V8L 4B2 | |||||||
Recorded by Race Rocks Ecological Reserve Guardian for Lester B. Pearson College |
Monthly Archives: June 2016
Seagull’s nest on live
Weather
West wind moderately strong the whole day: 28 knots at 5:00AM to 31Knots at 7.30 PM;sky :sunny ; sea :choppy to white caps.
Ecological
The oystercatcher’s nest being empty we put the camera 3 on a seagull’s nest closed to the boat shed and at the same time we can have a look on the railway. A friend of mine got a flipper going to the sea…It will be very interesting in the coming days because the gulls are really active birds. From the top tower I could observe a baby oystercatcher with his mum and it’s really not so easy to follow it its color is exactly the same as rocks around and they are small..the 2 geese are still there and the usual 4 Elephants.For the first time we saw a sea otter attracted by the coming chicks
Maintenance
Guy removed the old battery box from the whaler and put a new one .he put also a new battery and installed a new belt to have the whole thing secure.The bilge pump will be changed pretty soon.
Other
No visitor and not too much traffic around
Oystercatchers chicks …seen!
Weather
Windy day :Already 28 knots at 5:00 .This situation stayed stable to Noon but we were expecting a gale warning for the afternoon and yes we got it . the wind increased steadily to 7:30 PM where it get 50 knots . What a beautiful scenery around the rocks .Actually with the tide rising we almost couldn’t see the adjacent ones.It kept windy part of the night but at 1:00 when I awake ,it was just silence around .What a pleasant sound!
Ecological
For the first time we found our two adults male elephant seals closed to the lighthouse in the raging wind. In the morning we finally managed to see 5 babies oystercatchers . The nest closed to the boat shed has 1 and the 2 other nests closed to the crank and closed to the horn have 2 chicks . 4 elephant seals on Main (not always the same ). The 2 geese came back.
Visitors
Chris and Kyle came around 10:30 with 4 people from New York.They left just in time before the gale.
Other
DND activity :3 strong blasts and a Corvette (Number:338) was at Rocky Point for admonitions (I guess ). I know that some international military exercises in the Pacific are coming soon or have just finished . Anyway the ship was helped by 2 tugboats and slowly she sailed back to Esquilmalt.
Boats
3 beautiful identical sailboats running closed to the Vancouver Island coast. Late in the day a RCMP zodiac went around the Rocks. 2 big fishing boats, always the same one ,going fishing despite the strong wind.No watching vessels.
50 knots !Yes!
Windy days
Weather
The weather was the main concern around here . On Monday :A light fog at 6:30 PM only on the U.S.coast later .The wind has been around 20 knots at 5:30 AM and during the day increased to 35 in the afternoon with a gale warning for the evening and actually the wind went to 45 knots around 10:00 PM.
On Tuesday:we had 30 knots at 5:30 with a choppy sea and a good visibility .The wind diminished in the morning but increased after Noon and we had a gale warning in effect for the rest of the day at a maximum of 37 knots . Beautiful dark blue sea and white caps everywhere.
Ecological
We had 4 elephant Seals on main Rock (the 2 big ones and,a young male and an older female). They all managed to get protected from the wind and came closed to the boat shed. The birds are more and more protective of their nest and we got some helmets in case.
Boats and visitors
No boats around except Second Nature in the morning with Chris and 2 journalists from CTV. They spend 2 hours and tried to understand what is the life around the Rock. We brought them on the top of the lighthouse and explained the best we could.
Ocinebrina lurida : Lurid rock snail–The Race Rocks Taxonomy
Physical description:
Small,size to 1 1/2 ” (38 mm) solid shell with up to 6 whorls; fine close spiral treads crossing 6-10 axial ribs; Oval aperture with 6-7 teeth or more within outer lip height. Shell height most commonly is up to 40 mm, however usually less, with six to ten large low axial ridges crossed by prominent spiral ridges. Colors range from white, pale yellowish, dark brown, or red. It has a canal well developed, and its aperture is oval.
Classification
Domain Eukarya
Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Mollusca
Class Gastropoda
Sub class Prosobranchia
Order Neogastropoda
Family Muricidae
Genus Ocinebrina
Species lurida
Common Name: lurid rock snail
Global Distribution
Ranges from Sitka (Alaska) to Punta Santo Tomas
(Baja California). 57° N- 32° N, in the Pacific Ocean.
Habitat
Low intertidal zones, visible amongst the fucus and other algae at low tide.It is common on and under rocks and in crevices, commonly, clinging to rocks.
Feeding
The lurid rock snail is the natural predator of the giant chiton, Cryptochiton stelleris . It has been observed feeding on gumboot chitons, where it uses its radula to cut through the dark outer layers on the dorsal surface of the chiton’s girdle in order to eat the yellow tissue beneath. They feed on a number of prey items, ranging from bivalves to other gastropods
Reproduction
They have separate sexes. Fertilization of the egg occurs in seawater. Eggs cases are attached to water.
Interesting facts
It may be confused with Amphissa, because its shell shows a similar mixture of fine spiral lines and axial ribs. It’s less slender than Amphissa, its canal is better developed, and its aperture is not at all the shape being oval rather than nearly elliptical. The yellow-brown or orange-brown coloration, and the fact that the axial ribs cross the body whorl, enable one to distinguish it from a small specimen of searlesia. Often confused with larger rock snail, Ocinebrina sclera,
References
http://members.shaw.ca/bcshells/bcframe.html
http://people.www.edu/staff/cowlda/KeyToSpecies/Mollusca/Gastropoda/Prosobranchi/
Order_Neogastropoda/Suborder_Rachiglossa/Family_Muricidae/Ocenebra_lurida.html
Peterson Field Guides Pacific Coast Shells Percy A. Morris Houghton Mifflin Company Boston 2nd edition 1980 Canada
Shells & Shellfish of the Pacific Northwest Rick M. Harbo Harbour Publishing 1997
Other Members of the Phylum Mollusca at Race Rocks.
Return to the Race Rocks Taxonomy and Image File |
The Race Rocks taxonomy is a collaborative venture originally started with the Biology and Environmental Systems students of Lester Pearson College UWC. It now also has contributions added by Faculty, Staff, Volunteers and Observers on the remote control webcams. |
Census Day
Gulls:475
Elephant Seals: 5 ( on main )
Sea lions :0
Harbour Seals:104(same number than last week!)
Pigeons-Guillemot:50
Oystercatchers:3 couples +1 baby :7 ( maybe more )
Harlequin ducks:0
Eagles:1 (5 seen in the week)
Canada geese:0
Whales:0
Cormorants:0 (3 seen above this week)
Seashore birds: -11 Western sandpipers or surfbirds
-1 Whimbrel
– Another specie :not very small black ones :2
On Sunday .The weather has been magnificent and hot with a light west wind. The seawater temperature got warmer than Yesterday.We got a few hours of fog last night with the horn on.
The rocks are not so busy those days …(no luck for the watchers).The kelp is growing like crazy. I found a fresh small herring on a solar panel! The eagle are pretty active in the morning.I saw for the first time this year some seashore birds and going for the water sampling from the jetty I quickly had a glimpse on one little oystercatcher,the one from “the”nest. It looks to me that we have only one baby.
Other: 2 planes above and a kayak with 2 people went around the rocks at the end of the slag (beginning of the ebb tide :current :4 knots). No problem…
Maintenance : Another curtain for bedroom number 3 in the eco – guardians house, grass cut, solar panels done,water sample house cleaned.
perfect WE for the census
Camera 5 cleaningPretty dirty panelsEagles around Gossip corner
Lighthouse shadow and last fly of the day
Eagles around
Weather
At 5:00 West wind 10 miles Calm. Cloudy and foggy. 20 to 25 knots expected . We got 28 knots at Noon and 34 at 4PM. Very strong currents with the rising tide. Seawater temperature:10.9 (it’s colder)and 31.2 for the salinity the same than Yesterday.
Ecological
4 elephant seals on main . 4 has been the maximum number this week;usually the 2 older one and the 2 elegant young ones .Those 2 are always together . I call them ”the flippers”.No sea lions and impossible to find the newborn oystercatchers.the 2 parents are steady so the little ones must be hidden around.The eagles are pretty aggressive :first attack at 5:30 ,a second one at 6:30 and another one at 7:00. One of the eagle has a low fly and came very closed to our window.What a scenery!. Around Camera 5 there are many eggs and almost all of them have 3 eggs.
Visitor
3 people came with Kyle for a short visit. A second year student Malou and her parents from Greenland. Malou was disappointed because she couldn’t show a busy place : no Sea lions around! That make a big change .
Maintenance
Guy put a new belt and a new winch on the whaler trailer.I did some compost maintenance, adding some wood chips.(we are waiting for some moss peat). Solar panels cleaned like everyday .Camera 5 cleaned. ( In a week it would have been a true venture with the gulls around).
Other
Flying objects day: 2 planes above : one time at low altitude and the second time higher . Maybe the same plane coming back to Victoria. later a small watching boats came around with 2 people on board. It happened that guy was at that moment looking at the sea with the telescope and was amazed to see one of them opening a box with inside a drone for photos.After at least 30 minutes ,they finally left with their toy in the box. They wanted us to come on the jetty . Guy made politely but efficiently clear that they had to go: The camera was a very useful tool!
Fog horn 2nd time in a month
Weather
At 5:00 AM wind 15-20 knots increased to 27 knots in the evening. Cloudy and foggy (no census Today!) Calm sea and Visibility :3 miles.The fog horn honked a part of the night.This didn’t happen often this month. Seawater:10.9 degrees and Salinity:31.2.
Ecological
No birds around the oystercatchers nest maybe because of the pretty strong wind?We saw just see 2 Sea lions on South Islands and 3 elephant seals at night on the rock ! quiet and lonely place.
Boats
A RCMP vessel was doing in the late evening some navigation practice around the green boyd and we watched the same boats passing by : a big fishing boat and the cruise ships coming from Victoria. At 10:30 PM the last watching boat.
Maintenance
We had a meeting at the college with Chris and at the same time Kyle had a look at the whaler. He changed a filter and some spark plugs.Maybe a checkup by Yamaha specialist pretty soon.We got some rods for the new curtains in the eco guardians house and some wood chips for the compost.