Birds and Bioluminescence
Late Friday night I stood at the window that faced the ocean and saw something more than the incoming tide claiming the beach.
I grabbed my binoculars and then my bird book.
In the moonlight and the lights from the motel, I could clearly see over 100 little Sanderlings running in the surf. They were doing exactly what my National Audubon Field Guide described. "As a wave comes roaring in, the birds run up on the beach just ahead of the breaker, then sprint after the retreating water to feed on the tiny crustaceans and mollusks left exposed."
We turned off the lights in our room and we sat our chairs by the window to watch the little shorebirds antics. For well over an hour past our bedtime. They looked like ice-skaters because we couldn't see their legs moving. Back and forth they glided, always right below our window in the foamy breakers that at high tide were within five feet of the retaining wall. We walked down the outside stairs for a few minutes and could hear the"babies", as Sandra nicknamed them, chattering as though in conversation while they feasted.
"Here's some gooey stuff. Mmmmm, a crab. Quick, over hear. Run this way. No, that way. Glad the Seagulls are asleep. Here's a chewy one, yum? I got it first; get out of my way. Run Quick! Oh dear, that wave got my toes wet. Move fatty. Stop being a glutton and save one for me, will ya? "Oh don't you have pretty eyes. Let's get together when we head north, whaddaya say?"
When we were awakened at
Another performance that we know was provided special just for us involved a life form much smaller than the naked eye could see individually. Possibly phytoplankton.
Something was sparkling in the curl of the wave just before it broke. It distracted us from the birds and we were mesmerized. Streaks of electric blue lights flashed and highlighted the breaking waves as they roared towards shore.
Each of us was seeing for the first time little lightening bolts created by a growth of plant-like phosphorescent organisms flashing horizontally through the waves. The lights move rapidly as if agitated by the sudden rise and then disappear as the wave curled. An occasional spark would flash when the water swooshed over some of the rocks and shells as it flattened out on the sand. Apparently, stimulation of the cells creates the flashes to scare away predators.
Yes, we ooooohed and aaaaahed, just like we would have in the thrill of an afternoon thunderstorm.
What an amazing creation.
“Who kept the sea inside its boundaries
as it burst from the womb,
and as I clothed it with clouds
and wrapped it in thick darkness?
For I locked it behind barred gates,
limiting its shores.
I said, ‘This far and no farther will you come.
Here your proud waves must stop!’
Job 38
Comments
Loved this post...
:)
So glad you captured this for us and especially for you.
I snapped a picture of an owl the other day and thought of you immediately.
Beautiful shots, especially the first one!
Deslily - you're in Jersey? I'm from Jersey, stuck now in what I'm learning is a foreign land (Texas - foreign only because Texans consider themselves to be their own country).
Thank you for writing this and sharing.
I have been lucky enough to see the bioluminescence , it really is beautiful. Thanks for sharing!
I couldn't imagine living in the Heartland.
Do you have a room to rent out? ;)
I once got in MAJOR trouble with a high school English teacher for writing a paper about phosphorescent marine life - he gave me an F, and said I had made the whole thing up. Of course, it was pre-internet days - my parents had an extensive library, and then had to bring our books from home to prove that I wasn't trying to pull a fast one.
Amazing phenomenon...thanks for sharing!
Yes, it is.
I was "oooooh"ing and "aahhhh"ing while reading this post - your words truly captured the moment.
Beautiful.
You are a beautiflul writer, Pamela.
as well. I am thankful for it each and every time I experience it! Great post!!
Nice Man: YES!
SongBird: My sis read that chapter as we watched the setting sun and the surf pound
Heather: Now if I could ride along on your globe trotting and take notes
Stephanie, Susan: I feel that way when I read your posts, too.
Tiggerlane: And he was a teacher? You should have run down the hall to the biology teacher.
Kila: You should take the cubs to an ocean bay known for it's sparkling life. Find a dock to lie down on after dark and give the kids a stick to stir the water
Matt: one January I crossed the Ch. Bay Bridge and there were birds frozen in the ice along the edge. I cried.
The heartland has it's distinct beauty, too. Have you ever seen the ocean in the waves of grain?
Claudia: And you would have had pictures, too.
Mert: Fatty makes me jiggle.. ha ha ha ha
East of: Check it out next time you visit Newport. We weren't far from there.
Heather, Deslily: Jersey girls. Did you go down to the boardwalk?
Masgo: My Haiku just doesn't satisfy as yours does
BarnGoddess: Now that makes me hoot!
Walker: Hey - nice to see you stop by again!
Jeanette: I'd like to come to your backyard pool and write about it, too giggle
Swamptwitch: You were there in your Sister in Survival. I was majoring in Journalism in college because I wanted to be Lois Lane - and then I met superman.
Local Girl: Do you ever watch the sun come up and go down in the ocean the same day? and those two birds were comical, one started chasing the other, so maybe they weren't lovers after all.
Susie: lucky you - get to live so close
Karmyn: Next time it's ALL girls weekend.
Mark: You need to find a woman who lives closer to the ocean. I can introduce you
I will have to fire up my Instant Messengers, I haven't used them in a while. Which one do you use?
loves, venus
ivy