Big-eye scad are unwitting performance artists. To avoid predators, tens of thousands of these silvery fish鈥攁lso called akule鈥攎ove in unison in the form of quivering clouds, like the one pictured here. When a predator strikes, the akule formation shape-shifts, confusing the assailant. See the faint forms in the upper-right corner? They鈥檙e ulua, and they eat scad. 鈥淭hat may be, of all my photos, the most compacted, dense school I鈥檝e ever seen,鈥 says photographer Wayne Levin, who has seen many of these spectacular shows. His book Akule (Bess Press) features the image and dozens more mesmerizing shots.
Levin began shooting underwater nearly 30 years ago. He didn鈥檛 like color film鈥檚 effects鈥攖hey weren鈥檛 distinctive enough鈥攕o he switched to black and white. That made all the difference because it abstracted his compositions, blending sky with sea. Through simple tonal editing, at first in the darkroom and now in Photoshop, Levin sometimes adjusts his images鈥 natural chiaroscuro to create dreamy scenes of people or animals gracefully suspended as if in ether. His interest in big-eye scad came by accident. Several times on his way to photograph dolphins in Hawaii鈥檚 Kea-lakekua Bay, Levin passed over what looked like coral but turned out to be an akule school. He began searching for schools by simply swimming around, until a friend suggested he scout from a cliff overlooking the bay. Wearing polarized sunglasses, Levin could spot schools 30 feet below. 鈥淚 had to kind of extrapolate the direction to swim and hopefully find them,鈥 he says.
Harder to predict were the wondrous movements he鈥檇 see when he reached the fish after free-diving to 40 or 50 feet. Sometimes they rushed toward him like speeding cars. Other moments he鈥檇 swim after them, their school opening like a tunnel. Yet hungry fish inspired the scads鈥 most impressive choreography. 鈥淎s predators move in, they make these incredible shapes,鈥 says Levin. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e like kinetic sculpture.鈥
Besides being enchanting in its own right, akule synchronicity raises a broader sociological issue: 鈥淒o we [humans] see ourselves too much as individuals?鈥 muses Levin. What if we made a greater effort to engage with one another? If akule schools teach any lesson, it鈥檚 that there鈥檚 beauty in unity.
SPECIFICATIONS
Photographer: Wayne Levin
Subject: Column of akule
Where: Kealakekua Bay, Hawaii, 2000
Camera: Nikkonos V
Lens: 20mm
Exposure: 1/125 at f4