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Thirty new deep water species including bamboo corals, sponges discovered in the Galapagos
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  • Thirty new deep water species including bamboo corals, sponges discovered in the Galapagos

Thirty new deep water species including bamboo corals, sponges discovered in the Galapagos

Agence France-Presse • August 18, 2020, 10:37:33 IST
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The expedition explored for the first time, three steep underwater mountains, called seamounts, near the north of the archipelago.

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Thirty new deep water species including bamboo corals, sponges discovered in the Galapagos

An international team of marine scientists have discovered 30 new species of invertebrates in deep water surrounding the Galápagos, the Ecuadoran archipelago’s national park authorities announced Monday. The deep-sea experts discovered fragile coral and sponge communities including 10 bamboo corals, four octocorals, one brittle star and 11 sponges – as well as four new species of crustacean known as squat-lobsters – the Galápagos National Park (GNP) said in a statement. “These discoveries include the first giant solitary soft coral known for the Tropical Eastern Pacific, a new genus of glass sponge that can grow in colonies of over one meter in width and, colourful sea fans that host a myriad of associated species,” the archipelago’s Charles Darwin Foundation (CDF) said in a separate statement. Scientists from the CDF, in collaboration with the National Park Directorate and the Ocean Exploration Trust, probed deep-sea ecosystems at depths of up to 3,400 meters using state-of-the-art Remote Operated Vehicles (ROVs). The two ROVs, Argus and Hercules, were operated from the 64-meter exploration vessel Nautilus, which carried out the deep-sea probe in 2015. [caption id=“attachment_8723081” align=“alignnone” width=“1280”]Researchers carefully handle voucher specimens collected during one of the ROV dives. Image Credit: Ocean Exploration Trust/Nautilus Live Researchers carefully handle voucher specimens collected during one of the ROV dives. Image Credit: Ocean Exploration Trust/Nautilus Live[/caption] “The deep sea remains as earth’s last frontier and this study provides a sneak-peek into the least known communities of the Galápagos Islands,” said CDF marine scientist Pelayo Salinas de Leon, who led the study and announced its findings Monday. The expedition explored for the first time three steep-sided underwater mountains, or seamounts, located near the islands of Darwin and Wolf in the archipelago’s north. The area is home to the world’s largest shark population. “These pristine seamounts are within the Galápagos Marine Reserve and are protected from destructive human practices such as fishing with bottom trawls or deep-sea mining that are known to have catastrophic impacts upon fragile communities. Now it is our responsibility to make sure they remain pristine for the generations to come,” Salinas de Leon said. “The many discoveries made on this expedition showcase the importance of deep-sea exploration to developing an understanding of our oceans,” said Dr Nicole Raineault, Chief Scientist of the Ocean Exploration Trust.

“Since we never know what we’re going to find, we utilize land-based scientists who watch the ROV dives from home and communicate directly with the shipboard team in real time, to help determine what is truly new and worthy of further investigation or sampling. “Scientists studying the resulting video, data, and specimens make an astonishing number of discoveries, reminding us how little we know about the deep sea,” said Raineault. The Galápagos archipelago, located 1,000 kilometres (621 miles) west of Ecuador, is a fragile ecosystem that harbours the largest number of different animal species on the planet. Results from the expedition were published in  Scientific Reports.

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