• About KCC
    • Contact
    • Join Our Mailing List
  • Volunteer
  • Events
  • Blog
    • KCC Mailbox
  • Membership Options
    • Transition to Forest & Bird Youth
    • Members-only Area
  • Activities
    • Activity ideas
    • Quizzes and Games
    • KCC Book Reviews
    • KCC Stories
    • Puzzle Answers
    • Citizen Science Projects
    • Competitions
  • Wild Things Magazine
  • Join Us!
  • Renew membership!
Kiwi Conservation ClubKiwi Conservation Club
Kiwi Conservation ClubKiwi Conservation Club
  • About KCC
    • Contact
    • Join Our Mailing List
  • Volunteer
  • Events
  • Blog
    • KCC Mailbox
  • Membership Options
    • Transition to Forest & Bird Youth
    • Members-only Area
  • Activities
    • Activity ideas
    • Quizzes and Games
    • KCC Book Reviews
    • KCC Stories
    • Puzzle Answers
    • Citizen Science Projects
    • Competitions
  • Wild Things Magazine
  • Join Us!
  • Renew membership!

Northern KCC branch Adventure

April 19, 2023 Posted by Kiwi Conservation Club

Adventures at Cable Bay, April 2023

We braved the wild wind and had a wonderful rock pool adventure at Cable Bay. It was lots of fun exploring and learning together. With the wind making ripples on the pools, we were thankful for the underwater viewers to see the bottom of the pools and find some creatures. We saw cushion stars of different colours, hermit crabs, purple rock crabs, chiton, cats eye snails, a camouflaged cockabully, a mottled brittle star, kina, Neptune’s necklace, moulted crab shells and a crayfish shell. We also saw a patch of rocks with A LOT of bird poo and thought it must be where the sea birds rest. 
We had a few questions while we were there and I have found some answers:

  • Do crabs grow their legs back?- yes but they will only grow back after they moult (discard their old shell and grow their bigger shell).
  • How do sea stars eat?- they push their stomach out of their mouth and onto their food (small animals like barnacles) then digest it.
  • What eats kina?- we knew fish and people did, but sea stars also eat them! Kina eat seaweed such as kelp.
  • Reference: Ned Barraud & Gillian Chandler: “At the beach; explore and discover the New Zealand seashore”.

If you are interested in the food web of the rock pool, you could make a food web with the creatures we found, there is a template at the back of the following colouring book:  
https://www.otago.ac.nz/marine-studies/resources/download/otago062864.pdf

Share
2

You also might be interested in

Singing for seabirds
Photo by Craig Mckenzie

Singing for seabirds

Aug 25, 2016

Three hundred school children waving their arms around and squawking[...]

Nurdles

Nurdles

Mar 19, 2024

This speech was written by Kiri (age 10) from KCC[...]

Freshwater at puketi forest

Freshwater at puketi forest

Jun 21, 2023

Here is a photo of Iris at puketi forest, one[...]

Latest posts

  • Molly the praying mantis
    Molly the praying mantis
  • Videos from Bounty Trough
    Videos from Bounty Trough
  • Plastic Pollution
    Plastic Pollution

Categories

Become a KCC Reporter

We're looking for talented young writers to become KCC reporters and share their love of nature with kids across New Zealand. Think you have what it takes? Learn how to submit a story.

Search

Get in Touch

Send us an email and we'll get back to you as soon as we can!

Send Message

Search

Privacy Policy

KCO Login