Science 100 species discovered as scientists find new ocean zone - which are going to be turned into Pokemon in 3... 2...

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/science...es-discovered-scientists-find-new-ocean-zone/

An ocean zone nobody knew existed, which is home to more than 100 new species, has been discovered by Oxford University.

The Rariphotic Zone, or rare light zone, extends from 226 feet (130m) to 984ft (300m) and joins five other areas which have distinct biological communities living and growing within them.

The new section, was discovered during a research mission to Bermuda organised by the British charity for ocean exploration Nekton, and led by marine research scientists from Oxford University.

As well as the new zone, more than 100 new species were discovered including tanaids – minute crustaceans - dozens of new algae species and black wire coral that stand up to two metres high.

The survey team spent hundreds of hours underwater, either scuba diving or using submersibles and remote operated vehicles which can reach depths of 6,500 feet (2,000m).

“Considering the Bermudian waters have been comparatively well studied for many decades, we certainly weren’t expecting such a large number and diversity of new species,” says Alex Rogers, Professor of Conservation Biology at Oxford University and scientific director of Nekton.

Prof Rogers said the discovery of a whole new ocean zone, teeming with life, shows that there could be far more ocean species, and of greater variety than previously thought.


“The average depth of the ocean is 4,200m. If life in the shallower regions of the deep sea is so poorly documented it undermines confidence in our existing understanding of how the patterns of life change with depth,” he added.

“[This is] evidence of how little we know and how important it is to document this unknown frontier to ensure that its future is protected”.

The group also discovered a major algal forest on the summit of an underwater mountain 15 miles off the coast of Bermuda.

The undersea mountain’s slopes were found to harbour gardens of twisted wire corals and sea fans, communities of sea urchins, green moray eels, yellow hermit crabs, small pink and yellow fish and other mobile fauna.

There are more than 100,000 underwater mountains in seas across the globe yet less than 50 have been biologically sampled in detail.

The group's next mission will be to the Indian Ocean later this year, diving in seas around the Seychelles, the Maldives, Mauritius, Andaman and Sumatra.

Oliver Steeds, chief executive of Nekton, said: “24 people have been to the moon; we have played golf on the moon, yet only three people have ever descended to the nadir of our Earth, 11,000m, to full ocean depth.


“We now have the technology available to us to discover the deep ocean, to discover more of our planet in the next 10 years than we have in the last 100,000. We have been looking up and when we should have been looking down.”
 
black wire coral that stand up to two metres high.

So is that coral going to try to steal my bike too, or do I not have to worry about that.

In all seriousness though while this is neat, I don't really understand how nobody ever thought to look there.
 
I squealed, this is fucking amazing.

Until they come out with a new chart, I tried my best to figure this new zone out on a chart. Basically as-is, it overlaps the Sunlight Zone and Twilight Zone and it'll most likely shrink those zones down, and it's pretty much the transition from photic to aphotic, hence the new species of coral and algae.

ocean-layers-diagram.jpg

EDIT: I'm being a fricking idiot, editing to fix the attachment.
 
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The ocean is scary as fuck, maybe that's why nobody wants to explore it.

But seriously that's neat.
Yet you have niggers lined the fuck up to go to Mars etc.

I don't mean to shit on space travel, but it's such a run before you walk thing. NOAA is funded pennies to the dollar NASA gets and we know more about stars and stuff then what's in the water. It seems like this again proves we maybe want to focus how we work and live here before we worry about other places terraforming etc.

One example is those thermal vents, if we can go down tap into them, free energy. Amazing. How animals live down there in pressure that would crumble your skeleton like soda can in seconds.

I think the deep sea is amazing, and even when I try to pull my bias from it, it seems like we really should focus on that before we worry about a tennis game on Saturn or what ever stupid shit Elon Musk is trying to sell us this week.
 

We shouldn't assume their gender.

The ocean is the final frontier on Earth. There's so many bizarre things living in the deep.

Have they found a megalodon yet

Well we did find the caelocanth again even though we thought it was extinct for millions of years. It's only slightly changed from 400 million year old fossils.

So I'm curious as to what else might still be living. Although when you get really really deep in places where there was no previous data until recently it's hard to know how long the sea critters there have been around.

I'm glad these critters can live virtually undisturbed since it's unreasonable to go into the depths to bug them for lulz. I'm always afraid China will find a way to do commercial dives into deeper and deeper zones to bring back bizarre deep sea fish as erection aids.

Cuvier's beaked whale can dive close to 10,000 feet. It must be amazing to be able to naturally go that deep. This region wasn't even that deep. So there must be lots of other places that have even more surprises.
 
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