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Census of Marine Life, Highlights 2006
Frontiers of Marine Science Stretched by Census
Experts
Scientists intrigued by life around
hottest-ever seafloor vent;
Manhattan-sized school of herring off New Jersey coast;
More new than familiar species in Antarctic-area trawl
December 11, 2006
A host of record-breaking discoveries and revelations that stretch
the extreme frontiers of marine knowledge were achieved by the Census
of Marine Life in 2006, highlights of which were released today.
They include life adapted to brutal conditions around 407ºC fluids
spewing from a seafloor vent (the hottest ever discovered), a mighty
microbe 1 cm in diameter, mysterious 1.8 kg (4 lb) lobsters off the
Madagascar coast, a US school of herring the size of Manhattan Island,
and more unfamiliar than familiar species turned up beneath 700 meters
of Antarctic ice.
Census of Marine Life, Year 6
Now in its 6th year, Census participants and their
supporters pool talents and specialties, ships and laboratories,
archives and technology in an unprecedented global scientific
collaboration. Together, they are systematically recording the
diversity, distribution, and abundance of global marine life. The most
intense field work is taking place in 2006-8; the results will be
analysed and synthesized in 2009-10 with the goal by 2010 of an
initial census describing what lived, now lives, and will live in the
oceans.
Census scientists mounted 19 ocean expeditions in 2006 (a 20th
expedition underway in the Antarctic can be followed online at
www.awi.de/MET/Polarstern/psobse.html). They inventoried
biodiversity along 128 transects of the near-shore coastlines of 51
nations. And, using satellites, they followed across thousands of
kilometers of ocean more than 20 tagged species – from sharks and
squid to sea lions and albatross.
"Each Census expedition reveals new marvels of the ocean – and with
the return of each vessel it is increasingly clear that many more
discoveries await marine explorers for years to come," says Fred
Grassle, Chair of the Census Scientific Steering Committee.
Each of 17 core projects produces a different dimension of
knowledge. Two new associate projects were added in 2006, studying
biodiversity in the Gulf of Mexico and along the seafloor of the Great
Barrier Reef.
The Census now links 143 global databases, producing an online
library of more than 10 million records, up from 4 million just two
years ago. In that time the number of previously known and
newly-discovered marine species has risen from 40,000 to 70,000.
A complementary library of short DNA sequences – barcodes for quick
identification of marine animals – grew past 4,000, including 2,000
fish. Holes in the Census database define clearly the unknown ocean.
Extremes of Science
Hottest
At a thermal vent 3 km below surface in the equatorial Atlantic,
Census researchers found shrimp and other life forms on the periphery
of fluids billowing from Earth’s core at an unprecedented marine
recording of 407ºC, a temperature that would melt lead easily.
Although the species resemble those around other vents, scientists
want to study how, surrounded by 2ºC water, their chemistry allows
them to withstand heat pulses of up to 80ºC.
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Shrimp were seen on the walls of the vent chimney. Others in the
habitat include mussels and clams. All somehow tolerate an
environment of extreme temperature changes within a few
centimeters and high concentrations of heavy metals from the vent
fluids.
ChEss Photo credit: MARUM, University of Bremen © 2006. |
Darkest
Southern Ocean census takers revealed an astonishing
community of marine life shrouded beneath 700 meters of ice – 200 km
from open water.
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Equally remarkable, sampling of this most remote ocean’s depths
during three lengthy cruises yielded more new than familiar
species. (CAML photo shows one of scores of species found,
including a jellyfish, possibly Cosmetirella davisi, swimming with
tentacles raised.
Photo credit: AGAD, D. Rasch © 2006.) |
Most
Census fish counters’ observation off the New Jersey coast of 8
million herring swarmed in a school the size of Manhattan Island
qualifies as most new abundance found. Sound focused by a new
ship-based technology scans oceanic areas 10,000 times larger than
previously possible.
It updates instantaneously and continuously, revealing the
extension and shrinking, fragmentation and merging of the
island-sized swarms as a person might watch schools of minnows
swimming in a brook beneath a bridge.
GoMA Photo credit: N. Makris © 2006. |
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Deepest
Sampling 5 km below surface in the Sargasso Sea, in the deepest
zooplankton trawl ever accomplished, Census experts from 14 nations
caught these drifting, often soft and elusive animals in a
sophisticated net, the MOCNESS.
They collected more than 500 species, including 12 likely new
species, eating each other at the great depths or living on
organic matter falling like snow from above. CMarZ photo of
menacing-looking, animals such as this amphipod, a small
prawn-like crustacean, the supposed inspiration for the movie
Alien.
Photo credit: R. Hopcroft, University of Alaska, Fairbanks
© 2006.) |
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Oldest. Census seamount researchers found a shrimp, believed
extinguished 50 million years ago, alive and well on an underwater
peak in the Coral Sea.
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Neoglyphea neocaledonica was nicknamed "Jurassic shrimp" by its
discovers, who say it rivals the find in South Africa and
Indonesia of the coelacanth, a prehistoric fish previously known
only through fossils.
CenSeam Photo credit: Neoglyphea neocaledonica. B. Richer
de Forges © 2006. |
Richest: In the sense that biodiversity is richness, Census
microbe hunters found 20,000 kinds floating in a single liter of sea
water. Samples were taken in the Atlantic and Pacific, including from
an eruptive fissure 1,500 meters deep. Revealed by DNA studies, most
were unknown and likely rare, inviting an estimate that the diversity
of bacteria in the oceans eclipses 5 to 10 million. The researchers
also began assembling the best-ever video of protists (micro-organisms
that are neither animals, plants, or fungi) and to pioneer optical and
genetic techniques to extend the limits of knowledge.
Farthest. Tracking tagged sooty shearwaters by satellite,
Census researchers mapped the small bird’s 70,000 km search for food
in a giant figure eight over the Pacific Ocean, from Hawaii to New
Zealand to Polynesia to Japan and back to Hawaii. Making the
longest-ever electronically-recorded migration in only 200 days, the
bird averaged a surprising 350 km daily. In some cases, a breeding
pair made the entire journey together.
Largest. Among the many new species discovered by Census
participants during 2006, a 1.8 kg (4 lb) rock lobster that Census
explorers found off Madagascar may be the largest. Named Palinurus
barbarae, the main body spans half a meter.
Discovering diversity: More new species
New technology, the exploration of new regions, and new
efficiencies of identification are accelerating discovery and
recording of new species. Among the most remarkable finds:
Macro microbe. The protozoan that Census explorers of the
continental margins discovered in the Nazare Canyon off Portugal
differs from the usual protozoans seen swimming in a drop of water
under a microscope. The single cell of this fragile new species of
Xenophyophore, found at 4,300 m depth, is enclosed within a plate-like
shell, 1 cm in diameter, composed of mineral grains.
Furry crab. Near Easter Island, Census researchers discovered a
crab so unusual it warranted a whole new family designation, Kiwaidae.
Beyond adding a new family to the wealth of known biodiversity, its
discovery added a new genus, Kiwa, named for the mythological
Polynesian goddess of shellfish. Its furry or hairy appearance
justified its species name, hirsuta.
A squid that chews. Among the 80,000 organisms encompassing
354 families, genera and species – that Census deep-sea investigators
collected from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge was the reference specimen or
holotype for a new species of squid: Promachoteuthis sloani.
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Although collection easily damages the soft cephalopods, the hard
beaks are unique to each species, including that of the new squid,
which looks quite capable of chewing its food.
MAR-ECO photo credit: P. sloani. R. Young © 2006. |
Komoki in Antarctic waters. Komokiacea or "komoki" dominate
deep-sea foraminifera, protozaons with false feet used for locomotion
and food collection.
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In the Weddell Sea, where ice crushed the ship of Antarctic
explorer Shackleton in 1915, Census polar researchers found 59
komoki and komoki-like species, at least 42 unknown to science.
Photo credit: A. Gooday, National Oceanography Centre,
Southampton, UK 2006. |
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Doubling Zooplankton. Census zooplankton researchers discovered
3 new genera and 31 new species of copepods and mysids, small
crustaceans, in Southeast Asian, Australian, and New Zealand waters.
Analysis of collections from biodiversity hotspots, the deep sea, and
other unexplored regions is on track to double the number of known
zooplankton species
Charting distribution
New and continuously improving techniques also let scientists
collect and tag creatures in order to follow their movements. Marine
animals themselves are thereby recruited as oceanographers, mapping
their travels in the world’s oceans. With their help, the Census is
creating new insights into the present and shifting distribution of
global marine life.
Salmon cellphone coverage extended. When 2,600 fish left rivers
during the early summer 2006 for a career in the North Pacific, they
carried tiny acoustic transmitters. These could be detected for year
by the Census using an array of 252 receivers on the continental
shelf, reaching outward from shore and stretching along the Pacific
migration route to over 2,000 km in 2006. When a fish passes an
acoustic receiver, its unique identity is stored and later transmitted
to a visiting ship, telling the fish’s survival and location. The
Census Pacific shelf listening array achieved more than 95 percent
success in tracking salmon, sturgeon, and other fish engaged as Census
correspondents.
Wider ranges. When studying distribution, the surprise of
finding a species in a new place is as exciting as the discovery of a
new species. A species in a new place may indicate the species
adapted, the environment changed, or the area was seriously
undersampled. During 2006, counts rose to 31 species in the Arctic
outside their known range, plus 60 species never before seen over the
Mid-Atlantic Ridge between Iceland and the Azores. Meanwhile, Census
seamount researchers found an abundance of squat lobsters, so named
because they appear to squat on the ocean floor, inhabiting seamounts
off the New Zealand coast, some of which researchers believe may never
have been found before on seamounts.
Needles in haystacks. The span from schools of countless
herring down to single animals of a species among thousands collected
typifies the range of scale challenging Census’ charting. The rich
diversity of the isopod crustaceans includes common species and others
rarely observed.
In its exploration of Antarctic seas, the figurative haystack,
Census researchers found many new species, especially isopod
species, represented by only a single animal, the figurative
needle, among thousands of specimens collected.
CeDaMAR photo credit: Southern Ocean isopod, Munnopsis. W.
Broekeland © 2005 |
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Dams and survival. Soon after salmon leave a river for the
ocean, many perish. For decades people have wondered if salmon that
have struggled to reach the river mouth through many dams might be
less likely to survive in the open ocean than those that enjoyed youth
in a free-flowing river. Initial counts suggest that survival of
stocks leaving dammed rivers is comparable to those leaving rivers
without dams.
The most complete registry. During 2006, experts in the Gulf of
Maine released the most comprehensive list ever created of known
species in a marine ecosystem, 3,317 in all. Researchers continuously
refine and add to the registry, which includes marine life from
microscopic phytoplankton up to right whales and from seasonal
migrants to year-round residents.
Assessing abundance
Degradation and recovery in estuaries .
"The historical studies of the CoML agree with recent studies showing
steep declines in most wild populations of every marine animal that
people eat," says Dr. Grassle. "The past richness of the oceans in
many near shore regions is hard for people today to believe."
In such archives as taxes on salt to cure fish, Census historians
reconstructed the changing abundance of marine life in 12 estuaries
and coastal seas around the world. In archives from Roman times in the
Adriatic Sea, the medieval era in Northern Europe, to Colonial times
in North America and Australia, they confirmed the fears that
exploitation and habitat destruction depleted 90 percent of important
species. They also confirmed elimination of 65 percent of seagrass and
wetland habitat, a 10 to 1,000-fold degradation of water quality, and
accelerated species invasions. More happily, they also found signs of
transitions from degradation to recovery where conservation was
implemented during the 20th century.
Scarce in time. An expedition to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge
captured 300 fish species, several of them not seen since a 1910
expedition, while others considered rare were found common. The change
in abundance could reflect removal of predators or limited sampling in
the past.
Absent in space. Census researchers discovered 70 percent of
the world’s oceans are shark-free. In an extensive study of the vast
abyss below 3,000 m, deep-sea scientists found sharks were almost
entirely absent and sought physiological and other explanations.
Although many sharks live down 1,500 m, they fail to colonize deeper,
putting them more easily within reach of fisheries and thus endangered
status.
Assessing abundance demands efficiency. Expanding knowledge of
diversity with new species requires one specimen, charting
distribution requires several, but counting abundance demands
examining many. During three explorations of coral reefs,
Census experts expedited determination of many of the 1 to 9 million
animal species that inhabit coral reefs, using new molecular
techniques allowing rapid processing of large samples.
The Census zooplankton team performed the first DNA bar coding of
plankton on a ship at sea, telescoping what formerly took three years
of work into just three weeks, an approach that may revolutionize the
way researchers expand the boundaries of knowledge.
Other marine life dimensions
Marine rush hour commuters.
At dusk above Mid-Atlantic Ridge, Census researchers encountered a
rush hour, when animals rise to the surface to feed as if returning
home for supper, and measured the traffic precisely. Using the world’s
first long-term, full ocean-depth echo sounder, the scientists
observed a daily vertical commute of up to 400 m (higher than the
Eiffel Tower) between the twilight or mesopelagic zone, about 500 m
down, and the surface layer, where sunlight and photosynthesis prepare
food.
Proportion of protected coral reefs. Analysts in the Census
network concerned with the future of marine animal populations
compiled the first-ever global assessment of the extent,
effectiveness, and omissions of coral reefs as Marine Protected Areas.
Contributing to and using the Census’ information system, they found
that less than 2 percent of coral reefs worldwide are protected from
extraction, poaching and other major threats. They built their
worldwide database of protected areas for 102 countries, including
satellite imagery of reefs.
Media contacts:
Dr Ian Poiner, AIMS CEO
Telephone:
07 4753 4490, Mobile:
0419 702 652
Email:
i.poiner@aims.gov.au
Wendy Ellery,
AIMS Media Liaison
Telephone:
07 4753 4409; Mobile:
0418 729 265
Email:
w.ellery@aims.gov.au
Terry Collins, CoML,
Telephone: +1-416-878-8712, +1-416-538-8712
Email:
terrycollins@rogers.com
Darlene Trew Crist
Telephone: +1-401-295-1356,
Sara Hickox,
Telephone: +1-401-874-6277
National, regional and project media contacts:
www.coml.org/medres/medres66.htm
Census of Marine Life experts are available for advance interviews.
Please call to schedule a time. The full highlights report, including
high-resolution photos, video clips and other media resources are
online at
www.coml.org/embargo/highlights2006.htm
About the Census of Marine Life
Support for the Census of Marine Life comes from government
agencies concerned with science, environment, and fisheries in a
growing list of nations as well as from private companies and
foundations (including the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, USA, the Total
Corporate Foundation, France and Applied Biosystems, Inc., USA). A
complete list of sponsors is available at:
www.comlsecretariat.org/Dev2Go.web?id=302846&rnd=27644
The Census is associated or affiliated with several
intergovernmental international organizations including the
Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of the UN, the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the UN, the UN Environment Programme and
its World Conservation Monitoring Centre, the Global Biodiversity
Information Facility, the International Council for the Exploration of
the Seas, and the North Pacific Marine Science Organization. It is
also affiliated with international non-governmental organizations
including the Scientific Committee on Oceanic Research and the
International Association of Biological Oceanography of the
International Council for Science. The Census is led by an
independently constituted international Scientific Steering Committee,
whose members serve in their individual capacities, and a growing set
of national and regional implementation committees.
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