More Airport Beach shots with the Olympus 1030 Stylus:

Some keiki's in image below:

The Keiki Blue Box fish below was about 1" long and 1" wide.

The fish above as well as the Keiki Racoon Butterfly Fish below were hanging together and both were about 1" long.

The arrows above point to some type of morsel that the Hawksbill seems to be quite willing to work for! She had brought this piece of coral up out of a hole she was working and at the surface I saw here eat a larger one of these. I swam down and got this shot before she consumed the two seen here. While her head was down in the hole, the rest of here was up there in all her glory:

As I followed her up to the surface, a green sea turtle came by and swam under us:

The hermit crab below will probably need to find a larger shell soon. The black beady eyes on their stalks were the first thing to come out when I came knocking...

I have seen a small (less than 2" long) cleaner wrasse like the one below swim into the gills and out the mouth of some of the larger reef fish. This one wouldn't hold still for a sharp shot and it was willing to get close to me looking for a possible cleaning job.

I was drifting over the reef in a reasonable current and saw an urchin down about 10' that was spinning in place on the coral. Next thing I knew, there were some streams of white spawn coming up from it in a number of spots which quickly dispersed in the current. I dove down and got the shot below before the spawn had cleared completely:

I returned to the surface only to see another eruption of spawn that I was able to catch sooner after the fact:

The visibility lately has been less than one might hope or expect and I would guess to some extent it is due to these guys along with other animals putting their future out in the flow.