Low life: cold, polar ocean looks surprisingly rich.The first survey of life in deep waters "Deep Waters" is a short story by P. G. Wodehouse, which first appeared in the United States in the March 25 1910 issue of Collier's Weekly, and in the United Kingdom in the June 1910 issue of the Strand. around Antarctica has turned up hundreds of new species and a lot more variety than explorers had expected. A team of scientists from eight countries sampled bottom dwellers during three cruises in the ocean south of the Atlantic. Some of the researchers offer their "first insights" into these Southern Ocean depths in the May 17 Nature. The new work is the "first systematic and comprehensive study" of biology in the south polar depths, says one of the study leaders, Angelika Brandt of the Zoological Museum in Hamburg, Germany. A researcher not on the team, Richard Aronson of Dauphin Island Sea Lab The Dauphin Island Sea Lab (DISL) is Alabama's primary marine education and research center. Located on the eastern tip of Dauphin Island, a barrier island in the Gulf of Mexico, the DISL is the home site of the Marine Environmental Sciences Consortium and founded by an act of the in Alabama, welcomes the work "as a significant step forward.... The last great frontiers in marine biology marine biology, study of ocean plants and animals and their ecological relationships. Marine organisms may be classified (according to their mode of life) as nektonic, planktonic, or benthic. Nektonic animals are those that swim and migrate freely, e.g. are the deep sea and Antarctica." The Southern Ocean team spent weeks aboard the German research icebreaker icebreaker, ship of special hull design and wide beam, with relatively flat bottom, designed to force its way through ice. When the icebreaker charges into the ice at full speed, its sharply inclined bow, meeting the edge of the ice, rises upon it, and the weight of Polarstern in 2002 and 2005. The ship's low center of gravity keeps it stable enough for researchers to work in all but the heaviest seas. "It sits there like a bus," says Brigitte Ebbe of the Senckenberg Research Institute in Bonn, Germany. The team sampled deep-sea life by dropping devices that scooped sediment and its inhabitants
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame. from the bottom. It took the scientists 6 to 8 hours to lower the device and then bring up a single scoop. The ship stopped above 40 sampling sites at depths ranging from 774 to 6,348 meters. Ebbe says researchers often speak of the deep ocean as beginning around 1,000 m, below which there's a largely undiscovered world. In any water that deep, "half the species are new to science," she says. The Southern Ocean offered even more unknowns, the team reports. Of the 100 or more species of the small crustaceans called ostracods that the team found, some 70 percent are new to science. Of the 674 marine isopods--little crustaceans related to pill bugs--585 are new. Life wasn't abundant down there, but it was varied. The survey turned up more new isopod isopod (ī`səpŏd'), common name for crustaceans belonging to the order Isopoda and in the same subclass as lobsters and crayfish. species than had been found in the past century of exploring the entire Antarctic continental shelf The Antarctic continental shelf is a geological feature that underlies the Southern Ocean, surrounding the continent of Antarctica. The shelf is generally narrow and unusually deep, its edge lying at depths of 400 to 800 meters (the global mean is 133 meters). , says Brandt. The diversity was indeed a surprise, she adds. Analyses of mollusks and isopods in the Northern Hemisphere have inspired the idea that diversity dwindles the closer a habitat is to the pole. So far, "we doubt that," she says. "For the first time, we have a huge data set on the Southern Ocean deep-sea diversity; says Sven Thatje of the University of Southampton In the most recent RAE assessment (2001), it has the only engineering faculty in the country to receive the highest rating (5*) across all disciplines.[3] According to The Times Higher Education Supplement in England, a polar ecologist not on the team. He says that he looks forward to using the data to test hypotheses about the development of Antarctic marine ecosystems. For the newfound creatures, "the big question that remains is, 'How do they make a living?'" says Ebbe. Deep-sea creatures anywhere typically survive on debris settling from above, what biologists call "marine snow." The debris "has usually already been through two or three bodies on the way down, so there's not much nutrition left," she says. "The take-home message is that there is no place on this Earth that is not teeming teem 1 v. teemed, teem·ing, teems v.intr. 1. To be full of things; abound or swarm: A drop of water teems with microorganisms. 2. with life; says Ebbe. |
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