WEIRD AND FASCINATING CREATURES: 10 extraordinary deep-sea creatures caught on video and camera

As cameras, videos, and other technologies continue to explore the deep oceans, more data is being collected on rarely observed deep-sea creatures. Here are some fascinating videos and images of ten unusual and rarely observed deep-sea creatures—some were observed in shallower waters (in no particular order):

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SiphonophoraePhoto source for attribution here

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  • vampire-squid Vampire squid (Vampyroteuthis infernalis or “vampire squid from hell”) are found in deep ocean aphotic zones. Although these deep-sea cephalopods exist where humans rarely visit, anthropogenic pollution has been found in their environment and within the tissues of other deep-sea cephalopods. The image was found here. From Science Daily:

“It was surprising to find measurable and sometimes high amounts of toxic pollutants in such a deep and remote environment,” Vecchione said. Among the chemicals detected were tributyltin (TBT), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), brominated diphenyl ethers (BDEs), and dichlorodiphenyl-trichloroethane (DDT). They are known as persistent organic pollutants (POPs) because they don’t degrade and persist in the environment for a very long time.

Cephalopods are important to the diet of cetaceans, a class of marine mammals which includes whales, dolphins and porpoises. Cephalopods are the primary food for 28 species of odontocetes, the sub-order of cetaceans that have teeth and include beaked, sperm, killer and beluga whales and narwhals as well as dolphins and porpoises.

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The researchers collected nine species of cephalopods from depths between 1,000 and 2,000 meters (about 3,300 to 6,600 feet) in 2003 in the western North Atlantic Ocean using a large mid-water trawl. Species were selected for chemical analysis based on their importance as prey and included the commercially important short-finned squid Illex illecebrosus, as well as cockatoo squid, “vampire squid”, and the large jelly-like octopus Haliphron atlanticus.

According to National Geographic, “The vampire squid can turn itself ‘inside out’ to avoid predators—as seen in a video . . . released by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute to emphasize the need to protect deep-sea species from the effects of human activities.”

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In just a short time, one of the rarest sharks in the world went from swimming in Philippine waters to simmering in coconut milk.

The 13-foot-long (4-meter-long) megamouth shark (pictured), caught on March 30 by mackerel fishers off the city of Donsol, was only the 41st megamouth shark ever found, according to WWF-Philippines.

Fishers brought the odd creature—which died during its capture—to local project manager Elson Aca of WWF, an international conservation nonprofit.

Aca immediately identified it as a megamouth shark and encouraged the fishers not to eat it.

But the draw of the delicacy was too great: The 1,102-pound (500-kilogram) shark was butchered for a shark-meat dish called kinuout.

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  • Oarfish (Regalecus spp.): The oarfish is pelagic species, and it is the longest known bony fish. Little is known about the oarfish, and although it is thought that oarfish prefer deep-sea environments, most encounters have occurred in shallower waters. Specimens have been taken by trawl and via the coastline on rod and reel. The images were found here and here.  More interesting oarfish images can be found here.

Oarfish

As an indicator of the size of this oarfish, take note of the swimmer in this picture.

Oarfish

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  • Giant squids (including Architeuthis spp. and the colossal squid, Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni): These rarely observed massive invertebrates are fascinating creatures.  The colossal squid is the largest. The videos and images show or portray the giant squid.


Dietary evidence: Besides the “sucker-shaped scars [observed] along the backs” of some sperm whales, giant squid parts, especially the hard chitinous beak, have been found in the stomach contents of sperm whales. These stomach contents not only reveal a wealth of data about sperm whales, but their prey also.

Giant SquidPhoto source for attribution here

Frozen in time: This seven meter giant squid is preserved in ice at the Melbourne Aquarium.

Giant Squid2Photo source for attribution here

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  • Hadal snailfish (Pseudoliparis amblystomopsis) are true deep-sea specialists. This species was captured on camera almost five miles below the ocean’s surface. Furthermore, until the video, the hadal snailfish had never been observed living, since it was only known from a handful of specimens trawled up over 50 years before. To survive in their deep-sea extreme environment, these fish must sustain immense pressure and conserve energy. From National Geographic News:

The fish belong to a species previously known only from five pickled specimens trawled up by Russian scientists in the 1950s, said Monty Priede, director of Oceanlab at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland, which co-sponsored the expedition.

“Not only have we shown these fish alive for the first time, but we have multiplied by five the total number known to science,” Priede said.

The fish are able to withstand pressures equivalent to “1,600 elephants on the roof of a Mini,” according to a press release. The largest of the 17 snailfish observed measure more than 12 inches (30 centimeters) long.

Image credit: Natural Environment Research Council and University of Aberdeen

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This image is from the Musée de la Pêche in Concarneau, which is located in northwestern France.

CoelacanthPhoto source for attribution here

FISHERIES can’t keep up with the rate of seafood consumption by humans

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations measures how many of each species of each fish were caught each year. Using these numbers, we can see how some fish catches have peaked, meaning that there are simply not enough fish left to catch. Other fish’s catch numbers are still rising, meaning that demand for that fish is increasing: if we keep fishing the way we are, those populations will also start to drop and potentially die out.
GOOD Magazine

Fish In The Sea

Click the graphic for a larger view. The above graphic is via GOOD Magazine

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SHARKS: Mystery solved regarding world’s second-largest shark

IMAGE shows a swimmer with a basking shark—a harmless plankton feeder—off the Cornish coast.

The basking shark (Cetorhinus maximus) is the second largest fish in the world, and the whale shark (Rhincodon typus), another harmless giant, is ranked as the world’s largest fish. These large sharks are slow-moving filter feeders, and both species are threatened by overfishing, since “they have a lengthy maturation time, slow growth rate and a long gestation period.”

Basking sharks can “attain lengths of at least 10 meters, but the average size is 7-9 meters and may live up to 50 years, [and] it is a highly migratory species.” Until now, data regarding the seasonal movements of basking sharks were incomplete. From the Washington Post:

Basking sharks were easy to spot in summer and fall. Many cruised near the surface off New England, filtering water through an impossibly wide mouth.

But then, in winter, the sharks vanished from these waters, and scientists couldn’t find them anywhere else. One guess was that they sank to the bottom and hibernated, waiting out a food shortage. But nobody knew for sure: The basking shark became a reminder of the unsolved mysteries of the oceans.

Last week, however, a group of researchers from Massachusetts and Maine said they had found the answer.

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Soon, the tags began popping up in places that nobody expected a basking shark to be: near the Bahamas, off Puerto Rico, even the mouth of the Amazon River in Brazil. The sharks had remained undetected because they stayed so deep, between 650 and 3,300 feet, that they were not caught in fishing gear.

There is more plankton in warmer waters, scientists said — but it would be abundant enough off Florida, so there would be no reason to visit Brazil. Gregory B. Skomal of the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries said there could be another reason drawing the sharks south. Female sharks could be giving birth and raising young in tropical waters.

“We’ve never seen pregnant females, and we’ve never seen a newborn basking shark,” he said — and that could be because they haven’t been looking in the right place. Skomal said the data could be used to add protections for the sharks in the newly discovered habitat.

Remember, the third week of July is “Shark Week” on The Conservation Report


Photo source for attribution. The author or licensor of this image does not endorse my work or me and their image is protected under an attribution license.

NATURE: The fascinating lumpfish

cyclopterus-lumpusI remember when I came across my first lumpfish (or lumpsucker) while working on a trawler that was fishing out on Georges Bank. Before as a fisheries observer, I had been working exclusively on boats in the mid-Atlantic, but after some time, I volunteered to work on fishing vessels in the northeast. While working in the north, it was immediately apparent that the species composition found in the trawl nets up north was much different than I had observed down south—and the lumpfish was a species that I had never seen in southern waters.

The lumpfish are oddly shaped—like a ball—and these fish have strange looking tough feeling skin with rows of tubercles. Furthermore, they have a sucker visible underneath the ventral side that helps them attach to substrate. The roe of the Atlantic lumpsucker (Cyclopterus lumpus; see image above by Joe Kunkel) is a popular and “affordable alternative to the sometimes wildly expensive caviar produced by sturgeons.” C. lumpus is common in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean.

It seems like lumpfish are fairly smart too.

NewEnglandAquarium’sTraining Lumpfish Behaviors” video:

More lumpfish images:
lumpfish2toad-and-spiny-lumpsuckerslumpfish


Photo source for attribution here, here, and here. The authors or licensors of these images do not endorse my work or me and their images are protected under an attribution license.

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