• Why not take a moment to introduce yourself to our members?

John_Brandt

Experienced Reefer
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Weird ocean life surprises


By Dr David Whitehouse
BBC News Online science editor, June 24, 2003



New species of underwater life, including a giant sea spider and armoured shrimps, have been discovered by a expedition trawling in deep water northwest of New Zealand.



_39202056_fangt203br.jpg

Behold fangtooth


Researchers on a joint NZ and Australian voyage also found deep-sea sponges and a prickly shark.

The scientists have just returned from four weeks aboard the Research Vessel Tangaroa collecting and photographing species at depths up to 2.1 kilometres (1.3 miles).

According to Mark Norman, of Victoria Museum in Australia, the survey around Lord Howe and Norfolk Islands was the most complex research expedition ever conducted in Australasia.

"Many species new to science were recognised, including new sharks and rays, redfish, rattails, and a range of invertebrates," he says.

Each way bet

One newly discovered creature, called the fangtooth, has teeth longer than its head. To avoid piercing its own brain when it shuts its mouth, its teeth fit into opposing sockets.

The so-called viperfish has a hinged head and the coffinfish walks along the sea floor on short leg-like fins with a glowing lure on its head to attract prey.

They also found two rare spiked dogfish, a small type of shark, doubling the number of known specimens.

One of the strangest creatures was a Pacific spookfish which has a long snout that probes for electrical signals from its prey.


_39202052_wesq203ar.jpg

The wonky-eyed squid

There was also a squid, nicknamed the wonky-eyed jewel squid, which has a left eye much larger than its right eye. It seems that the big eye looks up for food while the small eye looks down for predators.

The spiders found on the sea floor are not related to terrestrial spiders. They have such small bodies that some of their internal organs are pushed down inside their hollow legs.

Work starts here

The strange characteristics of the new lifeforms are adaptations to conditions beneath kilometres of water where the pressure is hundreds of times greater than at the surface; and it is also completely dark.


_39202058_shri203ar.jpg

New species of armoured shrimps were found

The researchers also found a huge fossilised tooth of an extinct shark known as a megalodon. The tooth had been lying undisturbed on the sea floor for millions of years.

In total, 500 species of fish and 1,300 of invertebrates were discovered. It will take over a year to classify them all.

_39202060_spider203r.jpg

A spider but not as we know it

"We are only just beginning to understand our marine environment and voyages like this help us fill in pieces of the puzzle," says Australia's National Oceans Office deputy director Sean Sullivan.

"Scientists know roughly as much about Australia's ocean environments as we did about the Australian land 150 years ago."

The month-long voyage on the RV Tangaroa also found extinct volcanoes as they mapped the ocean floor during the 10,000-kilometre (6,200 miles) voyage.
 
A

Anonymous

Guest
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I have a megaldone in my 55 gal corner bow

Boy is it gettin crowded

lol

Interesting story

I can never understand why people are amazed when new species are discovered. I mean, the ocean is BIG

Bryan
 
A

Anonymous

Guest
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
:P Oh, shut up you guys!

John, thanks for posting that (w/piccies). Lord, I just LOVE exploration of "The Last Earthbound Frontier". Will wonders never cease? Let's hope not!

I'm floored (almost ocean-floored) that they found that tooth. How sure are they that it's a fossil?? 8O
 

John_Brandt

Experienced Reefer
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
gallery.crazy.fish.montage.jpg
Fangtooth. Gulper eel. Goblin shrimp. The animals that live deep in the ocean look as creepy as they sound. In June 2003, scientists bagged all sorts of bizarre creatures that dwell in the depths while taking a research cruise between Australia and New Zealand. The specimens found include a sea spider with organs in its legs, a shark with sandpaper skin and a squid with a big eye and little eye -- one to find prey, the other to avoid becoming
gallery.anemonehermit.jpg
Anemone hermit crabs often live inside the coral relative called zoanthid, where the soft crustaceans can be safe. The zonathid also benefits from the relationship, as the crabs move them to places where food can be found.
gallery.finnedoctopusMN.jpg
The finned octopus flaps a pair of fins to move, earning it second name, Dumbo octopus. It scoots along the bottom of the sea, using hairs to sense prey on the floor.
gallery.goblinshrimpMN.jpg
Goblin shrimp take their name from their twisted faces. Heavily armored, they are found on the sea floor.
gallery.humpbackangler.jpg
The female humpback anglerfish is similar to a tennis ball in size, but its black color, sharp teeth and expandable gut make it a nasty creature to meet deep in the sea. The female has a glowing rod hanging off its head as well, to lure its prey.
gallery.jewelsquid.jpg
The jewel squid hangs at a 45 degree angle in the water, looking up at prey with one eye that is much bigger than the other, which looks for predators. Also, tiny light-producing organs project downward, making the squid hard to see from below.
gallery.pricklysharkMN.jpg
The strangely shaped prickly shark has sharp skin instead of scales, making it feel sandpaper-like instead of smooth. A large liver filled with oil creates buoyancy and lets the shark hang in the water without swimming.
gallery.stonecrab2.jpg
The stone crab has long spikes for protection and claws for crushing. A relation of the hermit crab, its red color helps it disappear in dark water.
gallery.umbrellamouthgulper.jpg
The umbrella mouth gulper eel can open its mouth to pelican-like proportions. The fish waves the glowing tip of its tail inside its mouth to capture undersea prey.
gallery.fangtoothMN.jpg
The fangtooth is tough, but even the biggest is only the size of a human hand. Its two biggest bottom teeth are so long that, when the fish closes its mouth, they slide into two upper sheaths running along the sides of the fish's brain.
gallery.seaspiderMN.jpg
Sea spiders -- which are marine animals and not real spiders -- have bodies so small that they store some of their organs in their long legs. Some of the biggest ones are those found deepest in the ocean.
_39228962_coffin_noo_203.jpg
Coffin fish
 
A

Anonymous

Guest
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Good stuff.

Apparently, the deeper one goes the UGLIER the fauna gets. Yikes! 8O
 

Monkeyman

New Reefer
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
If you think about it, they only seem ugly because we are unfamiliar with them. If you lived in the deep ocean all your life, then ventured to the surface and saw a kitten, you would think it was ugly too.


Mike :D
 

Sponsor Reefs

We're a FREE website, and we exist because of hobbyists like YOU who help us run this community.

Click here to sponsor $10:


Top