Is Fiji Balolo Rising happening right now?

As of today, out of season, returns ~October. Earth Exhibit tracks the live conditions and flags it the moment it is on.

Twice a year, on a trigger set by the moon, the reefs of Fiji perform one of the ocean's most exact mass spawnings.

The balolo, a marine worm (Palola viridis, long known as Eunice viridis), spends its life hidden in crevices of the coral reef.

Then, on a single appointed night, it does something extraordinary: each worm detaches the rear, reproductive half of its own body, packed with eggs or sperm, and sends that writhing, faintly glowing tail wriggling to the surface — while the head stays safely below to regenerate.

Millions rise together in the hours before dawn, turning patches of sea into a soup of squirming green and reddish-brown strands.

The timing is famously reliable: the rising comes one night each in October and November, on the eighth night after the full moon, just before first light.

It is a beloved village event — families paddle out by canoe with nets and buckets to harvest the protein-rich tails, prized as a delicacy and folded into Fiji's calendar and culture as the 'Fijian whitebait' season.

Where to see it

A taste of where to see it. The full map, exact coordinates and the best timing for each spot live in the app.

Viewing spots
Reef Shallows off Savusavu, Vanua Levu

This is the short version

This page shows a taste. The app has the full list of where to see this, the exact timing, and live conditions for 1,000+ natural phenomena worldwide, so you know the moment one is genuinely worth the trip.