A
good catch of palolo.
To
further complicate matters, the actual time of emergence of palolo in Samoa
differs between islands. They usually appear around 2 am in the Manua
Islands, 1 am on Tutuila and closer to 4 or 5 am in western Samoa. This difference
is somewhat consistent from year to year and cannot be accounted for by difference
in tides or moonrise. The difference in tides between islands is far less than
one hour and the time of moonrise is only minutes apart.
1. From October 1 to 8, palolo will not appear until November.
2. From October 8 to 18, palolo will not appear in October or the swarming
will be weak followed by a stronger appearance in November.
3. From October 19 to November 7, there will be
a single, strong swarming centered on this date.
4. From November 8 to 17, there will be a strong appearance on this date, possibly
following a weaker swarming during the previous month
(see number 2 above).
Palolo
underwater
Once or twice a
year, palolo swarm to the surface of the sea in great numbers. Samoans
eagerly await this night and scoop up large amounts of this delicacy along
the shoreline with hand nets. This gift from the sea was traditionally greeted
with necklaces made from the fragrant mosooi flower and the night
of the palolo was and still remains a happy time of celebration. The
rich taste of palolo is enjoyed raw or fried with butter, onions or
eggs, or spread on toast.

When
it comes time to spawn, palolo will back out of their burrows and release
the epitoke section from their body. The epitokes then twirl around in the water
in vast numbers and look like dancing spaghetti. Around daybreak, the segments
dissolve and release the eggs and sperm that they contain. The fertilized eggs
hatch into small larvae that drift with the plankton until settling on a coral
reef to begin life anew.
The swarming of palolo is a classic example of the coordinated mass spawning
of a simple marine organism. The worms emerge from their burrows during a specific
phase of the moon, but the actual date is a bit complicated. The swarms occur
on the evenings of the last quarter moon of spring or early summer. In Samoa,
this is seven days after the full moon in October or November. Swarming occurs
for two or three consecutive nights with the second night usually having the
strongest showing.
Palolo
usually appear here in October, but sometimes in November or sometimes during
both months. This difference is due to the fact that there are approximately
thirteen lunar months in one calendar year and the palolo use primarily
the moon to time their spawning activity. If instead they always spawned every
twelve lunar months, their time of spawning would occur earlier every year.
After a few years, they would be spawning in August or July. In order to make
up for this difference, the palolo will delay spawning in some years to the
thirteen lunarmonth.
The fact that palolo adjust their spawning time means that there are
other factors beside the moon that determine the time of year they begin to
mature and are ready to release their epitokes. Several studies on this matter
have suggested that rising seawater temperatures, tides, weather, moonlight
or other biological signals may play a role in starting the maturation and release
of the epitokes. Once the swarming begins, the presence of the palolo
spawn in the water probably stimulates other palolo to release their
mature epitokes.
Rules For Predicting Emergence. Everyone seems to have their own methods
for predicting when the best palolo rising will occur. Several natural
clues that preceded the palolo rising enabled islanders to predict the correct
timing for palolo swarming. These included the flowering of the mosooi
tree, the closing of the palulu flower (a morning glory), a strong smell
from the reef, brown foamy scum (from coral spawn) on the ocean, toxins occurring
in reef fish, and abrupt weather changes or bad weather such as thunderstorms
or lightning.
So, will palolo swarm seven days after the full moon in October or November?
One set of rules used to predict the main night of emergence depends on the
calendar date of October's third quarter moon (seven days after October's full
moon). If it occurs:
9. Palolo swarming
Palolo
is the edible portion of a polychaete worm (Eunice viridis) that lives
in shallow coral reefs throughout the south central Pacific, although they
do not swarm at all of these locations. This phenomenon is well known in Samoa,
Rarotonga, Tonga, Fiji, the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu.
Palolo are about 12 inches long and live in burrows dug into the coral
pavement on the outer reef flat. They are composed of two distinct sections
(see drawing). The front section is the basic segmented polychaete with eyes,
mouth, etc., followed by a string of segments called the epitoke
that contain reproductive gametes colored bluegreen (females) or tan (males).
Each epitoke segments bear a tiny eyespot that can sense light (that's why
islanders are able to use alantern to attract the palolo to their nets).