Dark ocean depths home to exotic, unknown life
Alister Doyle
The permanent darkness of the ocean depths is home to a far greater
range of animals, from luminous jellyfish to tubeworms that live off oil
seeping from the seabed, than previously thought, scientists said. A
total of 17,650 species of animals, also including shrimps, corals,
Starfish or crabs, have been identified in the frigid, sunless waters
down to about 5 km deep.
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The diversity of life in the
deep sea is much greater than what we have believed, say
scientists |
“The diversity of life in the deep sea is much, much greater than
we’ve believed,” said Robert Carney of Louisiana State University, who
co-leads a study of the ocean depths as part of a wider International
Census of Marine Life (COML).
“The abyss is not the dark hole any more,” he said of surveys with
deep-towed cameras, sonar’s and other technology.
Light typically penetrates about 200 meters into the seas comparable
to the height of the 169-meter Washington Monument obelisk and the zone
beyond has long been viewed as a desert with crushing pressures.
Exploit
Beyond the sunlit area where plants can grow, creatures have to
exploit bacteria, for instance that break down methane or oil, or food
falling from the surface such as whale carcasses. Among creatures were
luminous jellyfish and gelatinous creatures known as finned octopods, or
“Dumbos” because they flap ear-like fins and look like the cartoon
flying elephant.
Dumbos, about two metres long, are among the big creatures of the
abyss, also including some sharks or siphonophore jellyfish, Mike
Vecchione, of the Smithsonian Institution, said.
“Siphonophorous have been reported to be longer than a blue whale,”
he said. The Census of Marine Life is a 10-year project due for
completion in October 2010.
Oil drilling
In one part of the Gulf of Mexico, experts found a tubeworm at 990
metres deep on the seafloor. When a robotic arm lifted it from a hole on
the seabed, oil gushed out it was consuming chemicals from decomposing
oil.
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Global
warming and acidification posing a threat to marine life. |
Carney said that oil companies focused most on geological surveys to
find deposits but that the presence of tubeworms could also be a marker.
“You certainly have a source or methane or liquid petroleum nearby if
you find these tubeworms,” he said.
Still, Carney said many scientists were “bothered by the prevalence
of the view that the deep sea is of no concern” and that a drive to
exploit resources was getting ahead of knowledge of the depths and the
creatures that live there.
Little is known about them. Only seven of 680 specimens of tiny
crustaceans known as copepods recently collected in the southeastern
Atlantic could be identified. Another trip found the Antarctic’s first
recorded whalebone-eating worm, Osedax.
Although the ocean depths are permanently black, many animals create
their own light with luminous markings to help spot or attract prey or a
mate and have working eyes.
Depth
A few creatures visit the abyss from the sunlit zone one southern
elephant seal was registered at a depth of 2,388 metres.
Global warming, stoked by human activities such as burning fossil
fuels, may also be affecting the frigid depths. “There is evidence of
both warming in some deep ocean areas and increasing acidification,”
Vecchione said.
Reuters
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