Unknown species unravelled in Antarctica’s hot springs
January 4th, 2012 - 3:03 pm ICT by IANSLondon, Jan 4 (IANS) Unknown species have been discovered on the seafloor near Antarctica, clustered in the hot, dark environment surrounding hydrothermal vents.
The discoveries, made by teams from the universities of Oxford and Southampton and the British Antarctic Survey, include new species of yeti crab, starfish, barnacles, sea anemones and potentially an octopus.
Researchers used a Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) for the first time to explore the East Scotia Ridge deep beneath the Southern Ocean where hydrothermal fissures on seabed, from which geothermally heated water issues, create a unique environment that lacks sunlight.
“Hydrothermal vents are home to animals found nowhere else on the planet that get their energy not from the sun but from breaking down chemicals such as hydrogen sulphide,” said Alex Rogers, professor of zoology at Oxford University who led the research, the journal Public Library of Science Biology reports.
Highlights from the ROV dives include images showing huge colonies of the new species of yeti crab, thought to dominate the Antarctic vent ecosystem, clustered around vent chimneys, according to an Oxford university statement.
Elsewhere, the ROV spotted numbers of an undescribed predatory sea-star with seven arms crawling across fields of stalked barnacles. It also found an unidentified pale octopus, nearly 2,400 metres down, on the seafloor.
“What we didn’t find is almost as surprising as what we did,” said Rogers. “Many animals such as tubeworms, vent mussels, vent crabs, and vent shrimps, found in hydrothermal vents in the Pacific, Atlantic and Indian Oceans, simply weren’t there.”
- The Hoff crab named after David Hasselhoff - Jan 04, 2012
- Sensorbots to track ocean health round-the-clock - Dec 21, 2011
- Evidence from octopus hints at ice sheet collapse - May 10, 2012
- 'Bolt from deep blue' may have sparked life on Earth - Oct 30, 2010
- Scientists say life thrives in porous rock deep beneath seafloor - Dec 08, 2010
- Globe's Deepest Known Undersea Volcanic Vent Discovered - Apr 13, 2010
- Scientists find evidence of hydrothermal vents on seafloor near Antarctica - Mar 04, 2010
- Geologists Discover The Deepest Undersea Volcanic Vent - Apr 13, 2010
- Octopus is the Jekyll and Hyde of the ocean - Mar 13, 2010
- 525-mn-year-old fossil sheds new light on primitive sea creatures - Mar 25, 2011
- Researchers to explore 'lost world' beneath Caribbean - Sep 01, 2008
- Deepest hydrothermal vent unravels clues about alien life - Jul 24, 2010
- 750,000 undiscovered species beneath the waves: study - Oct 04, 2010
- New optical system to revolutionize undersea communications - Feb 27, 2010
- Atlantic longarm octopus is 'master of disguise' in the seas - Mar 04, 2010
Tags: alex rogers, barnacles, british antarctic survey, dark environment, east scotia ridge, hydrogen sulphide, hydrothermal vents, indian oceans, journal public library of science biology, london jan, oxford university, public library of science, public library of science biology, rov, sea anemones, sea star, seafloor, shrimps, unknown species, water issues