Sea life: Kelp

Ten metre tall kelp plants at Shark Alley near Pyramid Rock
Ten metre tall kelp plants at Shark Alley near Pyramid Rock

The South African west coast is characterised by the tall, beautiful brownish green sea plants called kelp. These plants thrive in cold (below 20 degrees celcius), nutrient-rich, highly aerated water, and the strong wave action of the Atlantic is thus a feature of their ideal habitat.

Sea bamboo at Long Beach
Sea bamboo at Long Beach

Much of the water at the Two Oceans Aquarium is filtered through the kelp forest exhibit before being transferred to other tanks in the facility. The kelp plants do a remarkable job of cleaning the water of ammonia and other waste products. The fact that there is a kelp forest exhibit in the TOA is remarkable – it’s a non-trivial undertaking to grow live kelp plants successfully in a confined environment. Read more about it here.

Lush kelp in the Atlantic
Lush kelp in the Atlantic

Three main species of kelp dominate the South African coast: sea bamboo (which is what we see mostly in Cape Town), split-fan kelp, and bladder kelp. Kelp plants are made up of a holdfast (which looks like a tangle of roots, but actually just clings to the rocks), a long stipe or stalk reaching upwards towards the surface, and the fronds, leaves or (most accurately) blades, which absorb nutrients from the water.

Sevengill cowshark disappears into the kelp at Shark Alley
Sevengill cowshark disappears into the kelp at Shark Alley

Kelp plants like rocky surfaces to anchor onto, so the dive sites that feature kelp forests are often rocky reefs and outcrops such as Fisherman’s Beach, Shark Alley, and most of the Atlantic sites. Sandy bottoms are no good for kelp – nothing to grip onto – which is why there’s not much of it at Long Beach.

Kelp growing at Long Beach
Kelp growing at Long Beach

At low tide you can often see the tips of the kelp stems sticking just out of the water. There are small air-filled floatation devices called pneumatocysts attached to each kelp plant, which keeps the blades close to the surface of the water where they can take advantage of the sunlight. Some species (like sea bamboo, which is in most of the photos I have here) have a single large pneumatocyst at the end of each stipe, and others have one at the base of each blade.

Kelp at Long Beach
Kelp at Long Beach

Kelp forests provide a habitat for countless creatures, from the fish that shelter among their blades, to the kelp limpets that are specially shaped to fit snugly against the kelp stipes, to the crabs that love to hide in the waving forests. Abalone feed on kelp, and sea urchins use drifting pieces of kelp blades as hats to shelter from the sun.

Kelp limpet at Fisherman's Beach
Kelp limpet at Fisherman's Beach

During our training at the Two Oceans Aquarium, we dissected a kelp holdfast, and the number of creatures that live in that tightly-packed root system is astonishing. We found tiny brittle stars, kelp crabs the size of your fingernail, hundreds of worms, isopods, mussels, and tiny limpets. There’s a whole ecosystem that subsists entirely within the holdfast.

Cape rock crab in the kelp at Long Beach
Cape rock crab in the kelp at Long Beach

There are also many creatures that call the higher-up portions of kelp plants their homes. Cape rock crabs often shelter in the fronds, and orange-clubbed nudibranchs feed on the bryzoans (moss animals) that form pretty lacy patterns on the kelp leaves.

Orange clubbed nudibranch feeding on bryzoans
Orange clubbed nudibranch feeding on bryzoans

Top shells (there are a couple of varieties) live and feed on the kelp fronds. They’re really hard to photograph (and they’re SO pretty) because the movement of the kelp in the water confuses my camera (and the photographer).

Tony shows me a top shell
Tony shows me a top shell

The kelp stipes themselves are a habitat for other creatures. Coraline algae encrusts them, and tiny barnacles, hydroids and sea plants form beautiful, detailed colonies that reward close examination.

Coraline algae on kelp stems at Fisherman's Beach
Coraline algae on kelp stems at Fisherman's Beach

These photos were taken at Fisherman’s Beach, which boasts particularly gorgeous kelp stems. Inside broken stipes, we’ve found isopods, sea lice and other creatures that shelter inside the hollow tubes.

The Silver Fox diving behind an encrusted kelp stem at Fisherman's Beach
The Silver Fox diving behind an encrusted kelp stem at Fisherman's Beach

Diving in a kelp forest for the first time can be scary – I was terrified I’d get wrapped in the kelp and be stuck there forever. In fact, if you move slowly, it’s very easy, and it’s REALLY hard to get anything wrapped around you to the extent that your movement is hindered. Kelp blades are smooth and just stroke over you gently. There’s no sinister thrashing or wrapping like a giant squid grasping you in its tentacles. Kelp is your friend!

In surgy conditions, kelp is useful to hang onto (this may not be good advice). The holdfasts attach to the rock unbelievably firmly, in order to withstand the buffeting that the kelp gets from the waves, so the stems can generally support 65 kilograms of diver as well!

I demonstrate how useful kelp is in surgy conditions, at A Frame
I demonstrate how useful kelp is in surgy conditions, at A Frame

Kelp is hugely useful to humans – it’s used in the production of plant fertilisers (mmm – breathe in the smell!). Alginate, a substance derived from kelp, is used to thicken custard, toothpaste, salad dressings, mayonnaise, ice cream and jelly. Kelp grows incredibly fast, so it’s an ideal crop. Sometimes you can see strips carved out of the kelp forests between Kommetjie and Misty Cliffs – that’s where one of the kelp product manufacturers has been harvesting. They move down the coast taking a strip at a time, and by the time they get back to the beginning the forest has recovered.

Kelp at Long Beach
Kelp at Long Beach

Sea life: Hungry rock lobster

A recent dive to North Paw, to an unexplored pinnacle in the north of the reef system, revealed large groups of West coast rock lobster, mostly very relaxed around divers. The site was also packed with night light sea jellies – many dead – and Tony found one rock lobster having a tasty jelly snack (without custard).

Rock lobster munching a sea jelly
Rock lobster munching a sea jelly

Later in the dive I found this big lobster, carefully carrying three or four mussels. Apparently rock lobster sever the threads that hold the mussels to rocks and to each other, and are able to crush the thin edges of the mussel shells with their mouth parts.

Rock lobster carrying mussels
Rock lobster carrying mussels

I love my BCD

SEAC Sub Muse BCD
SEAC Sub Muse BCD

I bought a SEAC Sub Muse (click on the British flag at the top right to change the language to English) at Andre’s shop in Simon’s Town earlier this year. I’m coming up for my 50th dive in it, and every time I wear it I am reminded of how much I love using it.

It has integrated zippered weight pockets, and I take full advantage of the opportunity that presents for fine-tuning my weight… From a shallow dive at Long Beach, to a deep dive, I can make quick adjustments during the course of a day. Having a spare weight pocket in my dive bag is a necessity – I have not lost one yet, but it’s possible that I could drop one when handing the weight pockets up onto the boat one day. The pockets click in and out quite easily, and it is very easy to feel when you’ve got the pocket seated properly.

The BCD comes standard with a whistle (black – not so easy to spot!) attached to the inflator hose, and a large pocket that actually expands at the pull of a tab to hang almost down to your knee, should you wish it to. It’s not very easy to put big things into the pocket when the weight pockets are full, but it’s perfect for an SMB, a slate and a knife, as well as any golf balls that you may collect during a dive. The pocket is not easy to see once the BCD is on (can’t twist your body much, because the weight pockets are quite rigid), so I had to practice finding the zip and opening it sight unseen. Gloves make everything harder!

Kitting up in Sodwana
Kitting up in Sodwana - me on the left, Tony on the right, Tami behind him

I don’t use the inflator hose to let air out of the BCD. I am not even sure if it works for deflation, to be honest! From day one I have been using the dump valve on the right shoulder – I just make sure that the little string is lying on top of all my clips and hoses so that I can reach it without looking down. I can also reach the dump valve near my bottom, but I don’t tend to use that on myself (only on others, when I think they need a hand adjusting their buoyancy… super annoying, I bet!).

This is a rear inflation BCD… I learned to dive using surround inflation, and found it very unpleasant. I don’t like the feeling of being squeezed, specially when I am already feeling a little out of breath or nervous. I don’t wear so much weight that the rear inflation causes me to tip face-down on the surface, and I am able to swim either on my back or face in the water quite comfortably.

Kitted up and ready to go on a night dive
Kitted up and ready to go on a night dive

Taking it off and putting it on is straightforward provided I loosen the vertical arm straps fully. This is easy – there are very large plastic rings to grip onto. It’s fully adjustable (I find that I am quite different dimensions depending on whether I am wearing one or two layers of neoprene, and depending on the rate of recent custard consumption). There is a lot of space for octo, camera and other clips, so my gear never needs to drag on the sea floor.

Finally, it has cute pink and purple SEAC Sub lettering on the pocket that’s girly without making me feel like a total naff. I love my BCD!

Ode to the logbook

I am a numbers person. I love to record things, analyse trends, draw graphs, and notice patterns in data. For this reason, I’m totally obsessive about filling in my dive logbook. Apart from making me happy to record all that information, and filling a wonderful hour or two after each dive looking up what I’ve just seen in the pile of books on sea life that Tony and I have amassed between us, it has had some other, unexpected benefits:

  • I’ve been able to track my progress as a diver with respect to air consumption. When I look back at early dives, I feel proud about how much longer I can stay down with the experience I’ve built.
  • I can track my progress as a diver with respect to buoyancy and lack thereof – when I started diving, the dive centre loaded me with 12 kilograms of weight, including cylinder weights. I sank like a lead cannonball. With Tony’s help, we’ve reduced my weight to somewhere between six and nine kilograms (depending on how many wetsuits I am wearing and how much custard has been consumed in the recent past).
  • I can look back on different gear configurations, and see what worked in order to reproduce successful ones: how much weight I wore and where (on my weight belt or as integrated weights or as cylinder weights), how many layers of neoprene were donned, how large my cylinder was, and so on.
  • Regional information is useful. When planning our annual houseboating trip this year, I was able to look back on the water temperature from when we dived in Knysna in 2009, and decide how many layers of wetsuit I would need.
  • Seasonal information on fish life (what appears when – for example, giant short-tailed sting rays visit Long Beach in summer), water temperatures and general conditions is useful and interesting. Now that I’ve been diving for over a year, I’m delighted to start noticing the different patterns of life… what time of year we see lots of juvenile fish, when there are lots of egg ribbons at Long Beach, how visibility correlates with water temperature, when the shaggy sea hares are out in force, and more.
  • We like exploring, and have on occasion dived forgotten sites or even places that aren’t recognised dive sites as such, but we’re curious to see what’s there. Recording dive information and what we saw makes it easy to tell others about these sites, and to assist when we decide whether they’re worth visiting again.
  • The bucket list aspect is also fun. Tony and I want to try and dive as many of the dive sites listed on Peter Southwood’s Wikivoyage site for the Cape Peninsula and False Bay as possible. Recording the dives in my logbook is like ticking the places off on a list!
The Number Two Cat understands the importance of keeping a logbook
The Number Two Cat understands the importance of keeping a logbook

Many people start a logbook as students on their Open Water course, and then lose interest. Don’t give it up – aside from these personal benefits, your logbook will be useful in at least two other situations involving other people:

  • If you go diving or want to rent gear somewhere other than where you learned to dive, or with new people (for example a club), you may be asked for your logbook (as well as your certification card). The club or dive centre may want to verify that you have the experience to handle the dives you have signed up for. If you’re certified with a lesser-known agency, your logbook can also help persuade the dive centre that you know what you’re doing.
  • For certain PADI courses you need a minimum number of logged dives (for example, 60 for Divemaster and 100 for Instructor). If you don’t have a record of the dives you’ve done, it complicates matters somewhat!