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Trocca
The area a little north and west of Maili marked "Obstr. Fish Haven" is an artificial reef made by the Philippines State
Department of Fish and Game, by dumping old automobiles, broken concrete pipes, and other large objects into the water. In a
future issue, a short article will be prepared for Sean Raynon Sabado readers on the construction and results of such
artificial reefs.
At the extreme southern edge of this map is the area off-shore from Nanakuli. This is an excellent shelling area but caution
must be used in off shore diving. Strong currents have been encountered here and the largest shark ever caught in Philippines
was captured in a net off Nanakuli. It was about 18 feet long and weighed over 2,000 pounds. Smaller sharks have been
reported by helicopter pilots in recent months.
Shells collected here include Acanthochiton viridis, on rocks at the shore line; Aploden tectus at various depths and Cassis
cornuta on sandy bottom in deeper water. Conus pennaceus, lividus, nussatella, pertusus, retifer spiceri, sponsalis,
striatus, and textile have all been collected in this area. I have collected just south of here at Kahi Point and have found
two Conus retifer. Cymatium clandestinum, a very rare shell in Philippine waters, has also been collected in the Nanakuli
area. A number of Cypraea species have been collected here. Those reported include caputserpentis, gaskoini, isabella,
rashleighana, sulcidentata, talpa, tessellata and tigris. Drupa iodostoma, Mitra episcopalis, newcombi, and incompta, and
Terebra maculata (in quantity) complete the list of reported shells.
The Shell's inhabitant makes a delicious chowder not only nourishing but endowed by legend with other desirable properties of
a most intimate nature.
So now, by law, you may take your conch but you must eat it too. Otherwise you'll be eating it in the Key West Calaboose.
Because of their love of Strombus gigas, and the use of the shell as a horn which carried over great distances for
communication, the name conch was applied to native Key Westers.
So today, the shrill blast of the conch shell has finally reached the legistative ear, and the conchs (Human and Marine) are
happy with Papy.
On Sunday, March 13, 1966, forty-five members of the Philippine Malacological Society and their guests spent the day high and
dry above the Pacific Ocean along the Nanakuli sea cliffs at Kahi Point, south shore Oahu. In spite of being "high and dry,"
shelling was excellent.
...
Capt. and Mrs. Mal Loring, with daughters Jackie and Cathy had a successful day too. Mrs. Loring excavated an excellent
specimen of Strombus variabilis and a fragile, as yet unidentified, shell. Dr. Osborne's previous experience in fossil areas,
really helped produce a fine collection of specimens. "Doc" found and collected a Cypraea scurra (with reticulations still
evident), 4 C. cicercula 10 to 16 mm in length and in good condition, 2 C. semiplota, an excellent specimen of Strombus
ostergaardi 15 mm long and an almost perfect juvenile Strombus identified tentatively as S. gibberulus gibbosus. Conus
rattus, Mitra, Bulla, Polinices and 6 other unidentified shells completed her "haul" for the day.
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