All Along the Outfall

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

Merry

Contributor
Messages
335
Reaction score
864
Location
Torrance, California
# of dives
1000 - 2499
I felt a little guilty asking Phil to take us to the White Point outfall pipe again. A boulder-buttressed, sand-flanked sewer pipe with a few strands of scraggy kelp doesn’t promise a stellar underwater experience. It turned out to be a good call.

Off White Point, San Pedro CA, two reinforced, spun concrete pipes carry L.A. County Sanitation District’s treated wastewater into the ocean on a daily basis. Lying between the main pipes is a double-barrel pipeline that extends to about 1 mile offshore. One leg serves hydraulic relief during heavy rains; the other leg is standby.


Taken from Physical and Chemical Oceanography at White Point by J. Stein







The western-most pipe is 8-ft in diameter and has been in operation since 1957. This is the conduit by which Montrose Chemical Corporation dumped an estimated 2,000 tons of DDT onto the Palos Verdes Shelf. The environmental calamity was enhanced by other sources with the introduction of PCBs and other industrial wastes into the sanitation system.

The eastern-most pipe is the one we dove. Ten feet in diameter, it has the most relief. Completed in 1967, it extends 2.25 miles offshore and empties in ~200 fsw.

We dropped anchor in 65-70 fsw. Given that it was a little dark and a little silty, the tangle of rocks and algae was bursting with some of our favorite photo subjects. Even better, the adjacent seabed tantalized us with a bonanza of newly deposited, glistening, squid egg cases. In some, development was far enough along that the embryos could be seen. Note the tear-shaped yolk sac and the faint red iris of the eyes (tighter shots).


















Kelp tops supported dense aggregations of the lion nudibranch, Melibe leonina, which was feeding on drifting invertebrates.





Juvenile Polycera atra feeding and laying eggs on the bryozoan-covered kelp.









Juvenile Triopha maculata, ditto.





Bluering topsnail








During construction of the outfall, boulders were piled around the pipe to prevent scour caused by ocean currents. These rocks also provide rich habitat for many species.

Phil spotted this cabezon guarding 2 nests of eggs.
















On one nest, larval fish had begun to escape their confines and begin their tenuous life in the plankton.





Sea slugs abound:
Peltodoris nobilis



Acanthodoris hudsoni




One of my favorites, Acanthodoris lutea




The uncommon Felimida macfarlandi




 
Honestly, I just hope you two know how much pleasure you've given me over the last few years, by posting your amazing photos.

Those blue-ringed topsnail shots are stunning.

We have a similar dive here, a storm drain/sewage outfall pipe covered in rocks. It's a very shallow dive, in ten feet or so of water through most of its length, but in the summer, it's covered with a heavy growth of colorful sea lettuces, and harbors a wide variety of small critters. Life takes advantage of any habitat!
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/perdix-ai/

Back
Top Bottom