Yahoo – AFP,
May 31, 2017
Sydney (AFP) - Faceless fish and other weird and wonderful creatures, many of them new species, have been hauled up from the deep waters off Australia during a scientific voyage studying parts of the ocean never explored before.
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| The scientists came across an unusual faceless fish, which has only been recorded once before by the pioneering crew of HMS Challenger off Papua New Guinea in 1873 (AFP Photo/John POGONOSKI) |
Sydney (AFP) - Faceless fish and other weird and wonderful creatures, many of them new species, have been hauled up from the deep waters off Australia during a scientific voyage studying parts of the ocean never explored before.
The
month-long journey off the country's eastern seaboard has been surveying life
lurking in a dark and cold abyss that plunges four kilometres (2.5 miles) below
the surface, using nets, sonar and deep-sea cameras.
Chief
scientist on board "The Investigator" Tim O'Hara from Museums
Victoria told AFP Wednesday the search area was "the most unexplored
environment on earth".
Bright red
spiky rock crabs, puffed-up coffinfish, blind sea spiders and deep sea eels
have been collected since the scientists began their voyage -- from Launceston
in Tasmania north towards the Coral Sea -- on May 15.
They also
came across an unusual faceless fish, which has only been recorded once before
by the pioneering scientific crew of HMS Challenger off Papua New Guinea in
1873.
"It
hasn't got any eyes or a visible nose and it's mouth is underneath,"
O'Hara said from the ship.
At such
huge depths, it is so dark that creatures often have no eyes or produce their
own light through bioluminescence, he added.
Another
find was carnivorous sponges that wield lethal spicules made of silicon,
effectively glass. They get small crustaceans hooked on their Velcro-like
spines, to be slowly digested in-situ.
This
technique differs from most deep-sea sponges, which feed on bacteria and other
single-celled organisms filtered from passing currents.
"We've
got 27 scientists on board who are leaders in their fields and they tell me
that around one-third of what we've found are new species," said O'Hara, with
several thousand specimens so far retrieved and two weeks of the trip still to
go.
Life at
such depths is one of crushing pressures, no light, little food and freezing
temperatures, with animals that call it home evolving unique ways to survive.
As food is
scarce, they are usually small and move slowly. Many are jelly-like and spend
their lives floating about, while others have ferocious spines and fangs and
lie in wait until food comes to them.
Working in
such an environment was challenging, O'Hara admitted, with each fishing
expedition taking up to seven hours to deploy and retrieve the equipment and
its eight kilometres of cable from the sea floor, given it is so far down.
But the
data gathered was helping to improve the understanding of Australia's deep-sea
habitats, their biodiversity and the ecological processes that sustain them,
O'Hara said.
"This
will assist in its conservation and management and help to protect it from the
impacts of climate change, pollution and other human activity," he said.

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