MERIMBULA LAKE BLOG
A Blog of Merimbula Lake February 2008
How ephemeral are the creatures that live in Merimbula Lake. You can
walk past hundreds of them and never see them or know who they are. A
continual pandemonium of feeding, fighting and flirting is going on
just at your feet whilst you nonchalantly stride along the meandering
Merimbula Lake boardwalk. They are ephemeral to us because we only
catch small glimpses of their wet world but their existence is as real
and frantic as ours can be, sometimes even more so. The animals that
use the lake are numerous - stingrays, soldier crabs, birds, fish,
worms, eels, seahorses, shrimps, prawns and so on. The lake is such a
diverse tidal ecosystem that the list of species animals found in the
lake, which can be seen with the naked eye, would be in the hundreds.
This blog is about the lives of the animals and people that live and
work and feed around and in the lake. Every week I discover a new
aspect of the lake that entrances me and through this blog I am seeking
to document it for others who have an interest in this intriguing world
of a tidal lake. My experiences have already been thrilling such as
when I witnessed the birth of a stingaree in a pool of water or watched
the emergence of the glamorous bubble shells from the sand at dusk.
What is a stingaree and what is a stingray?
Commonly, people call all flat, round elasmobranchs with a tail, a
‘stingray’. However, there are several types of ‘stingrays’
found in the lake which will all puncture you with their barbed spine
and others which don’t have spines. The more general and correct term
for this group of animals is just ‘rays’.
Merimbula Lake is host to many rays because of its rich food source of
crabs, worms and shelled invertebrates. When snorkelling, you will
frequently come across rays buried in the sand with just their
breathing holes showing .
The easiest way to spot a ray if you don’t wish to get wet, is to
stand on the boardwalk at dusk or at night, or even on an overcast day,
when the tide is high and there is little wind, and look into the
water. Although they can be seen anywhere along the boardwalk, the
first major bend in the boardwalk after starting from the Fisheries
Office, where the ironbarks are hanging over the boardwalk, is a
popular feeding place for the stingarees.
If you see a cloudy area in the water, it is probably a ray stirring up
the bottom in search of a soldier crab or worm. And if you are
particularly fortunate, you will see a fish such as a flounder or
toadfish following the ray, patiently waiting for some leftovers. Saw a
flounder doing just this last week; it was about 25cm long and was
following a juvenile stingaree around which was only 30cm in length.
They seemed to be enjoying each other’s company as the flounder would
actually lay on the tail of the stingaree as it rustled up some food
for both of them.
At Mitchies Jetty when the fishing charter boats come in and throw
their fish offal into the water, you may see the gigantic Black
Stingrays or the Eagle Rays come in for a feed. They seem to know when
the boats are coming in and sail in through the channel to collect
their morning tea. They seem to be fairly harmless when you are
snorkelling around them and they will often approach snorkellers and
divers to within a metre however, it does pay to be cautious. Stepping
on a stingray or stingaree will result almost definitely result in a
barb in the leg.
The types of rays in Merimbula are:
The Fiddler Ray- mottled body colouring and has a shark like tail with no venomous spine
Many species of stingarees - tail is rounded at the end with a serrated
venomous spine found midway along the tail. The body is generally cream
to brownish in colour. The Crossback or Banded Stingaree has a mottled
pattern of dark brown/black on light brown.
The Eagle Rays which are probably the most gracious animal to watch in
the lake. It’s streamlined body, its manta ray-like pointed wings and
blue dappled markings which glow in the sunlight, give it an eerily
majestic quality. And yes, it’s very thin whip-like tail does have a
barbed spine on it.
The Black Stingrays are the larger stingrays found in the lake. The
Black Stingray, which is common here, can grow up to 3.35m long and
1.8m wide. (They are not ‘Bullrays’ as they are sometimes called by
locals.) These have a long tapering tail (ie not rounded at the end
like a stingaree’s tail) and can have one or two venomous spines.
Skates and Fiddler Rays don’t have a barb and a fairly harmless
however, the Numbfish also doesn’t have a barb but it is harmful. The
Numbfish will give you a nasty electric shock causing temporary
paralysis.
Birds of the boardwalk April 2nd 2008
As the boardwalk passes through many habitat environments, there are
many species of birds ranging from water birds to forest birds to
grass/scrub birds.
Today I counted over 30 black swans, approximately one hundred metres
from the shore. They tend to frequent one area along the boardwalk,
between the bridge and the end of the boards. This seems to be their
favourite feasting place and they tear up the ‘eel grass’ with
relish.
The other recent returned occupant of the lake is the Intermediate
Egret. There were 10 roosting on one mangrove tree this morning at high
tide, near the second seat on the boardwalk. They feed on mostly small
fish but also frogs, insects and crustaceans. They are also known as
the Plumed Egret which is not surprising as their plumage presents a
magnificent silhouette in the sun.
The Royal Spoonbill is back in the lake and you will have no trouble
spotting the lake’s regular visitor, the ‘Australian Ibis’. Of
course, there are many pelicans and White-faced Herons about. The
latter seem to have built a nest above the boardwalk. If you look above
you at the beginning of the boardwalk you will see an anarchic nest
built of twisted twigs. It is empty now but up until recently I had
noticed a young bird present. A few days after this I did happen to see
a kite fly from the direction of the nest with a small grey parcel. I
clambered up the hill to gain a closer view of the nest and I noticed a
broken blue egg, possible that of a small heron. The nest was empty and
has been since. |