• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

A Fascinating Array Of Fish Has Been Found By A Deep-Sea Expedition

November 4, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

An expedition to survey the hidden depths around Christmas Island and the Cocos (Keeling) Islands has returned with some amazing finds. A team, led by Museums Victoria Research Institute, Australia, set out from Darwin on September 30 for a 35-day voyage on the research vessel (RV) Investigator, operated by the Australian national science agency CSIRO.

As well as using a multibeam echosounder to complete the first high-resolution map of the region’s ocean floor, the expedition aimed to perform an extensive study of biodiversity in the area.

Advertisement

“The great range of research capabilities offered by RV Investigator will again be on show during this voyage with scientific data collected both above and below the waves of the Indian Ocean, from high into the atmosphere all the way down to abyssal depths of more than 5,000 metres [16,404 feet]. These data will be vital for increasing our understanding of this remote and important region of Australia’s ocean territory,” said Toni Moate, Director of the CSIRO Marine National Facility, in a statement.

Dr Tim O’Hara, Chief Scientist and Senior Curator, Marine Invertebrates at Museums Victoria, has suggested that up to a third of the marine species that the team has found may be brand-new to science. As Museums Victoria senior collections manager Dianne Bray told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, “Life in the deep sea is so poorly known that it really is a lucky dip.”

Judging by some of the dazzling discoveries that have been shared on social media, it looks as though this dip into the unknown has been very lucky indeed. Here are some of the highlights.

Advertisement

First up, we have this adorable walking batfish (look at the little face!). As the name suggests, these guys are not the best swimmers, so they use their fins like limbs to walk along the sea floor.

Upping the super-cute stakes even further is the charming sponge crab.

Talking of crabs, the team found this otherworldly hermit crab using a squidgy coral called a zoanthid as its shell.

And if that wasn’t bizarre enough, take a look at these deep-sea fish that were recovered from 500 m (1,640 feet) below the surface.

It wasn’t all denizens of the deep. The researchers also captured these stunning shots of flying fish.

#RVInvestigator#InvestigatingtheIOT@CSIRO@austmus@museumsvictoria@BushBlitz2@ParksAustraliapic.twitter.com/H0UWi5zNt2— KaiTheFishGuy (@FishGuyKai)

However, the prize for the most impressive specimen of all may have to go to (drumroll please)… the tripod spiderfish.

Not much is known about these deep-sea dwellers. They use their elongated fin rays to prop themselves up on the ocean floor, simply waiting for the small crustaceans that they feed on to come to them. Sounds like the type of lifestyle we could get behind.

The expedition may have come to an end, but the study of the scientific samples collected is just beginning. As Director and CEO of Museums Victoria Lynley Crosswell said before the team set out, “The research outcomes from this voyage will be invaluable to our understanding of Australia’s deep-sea environments and the impact humans are having on them.”

You can see more finds from this and previous RV Investigator expeditions using the hashtag #rvinvestigator.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. ECB may dial back support but won’t take it away just yet
  2. Mexico cuts Pemex’s tax burden, forecasts 4.1% growth for 2022
  3. Matilda, Willy Wonka join Netflix catalog as it buys Roald Dahl’s works
  4. NFL-Brady hails current, former team mates for help in setting passing mark

Source Link: A Fascinating Array Of Fish Has Been Found By A Deep-Sea Expedition

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • New Interstellar Comet Tracked To Its Origin Region: “It’s Much Older Than The Solar System”
  • ChatGPT Gets “Absolutely Wrecked” By An Atari Video Chess Game Built In 1979
  • Tick Bites Are Nearing Record Highs In Some US States – Why Is This Season So Bad?
  • Rivals Wanted To Erase This Great Female Pharaoh From History, But Is That The Whole Story?
  • Neanderthals Repurposed Cave Lion Bones Into “Multifunctional Tools” 130,000 Years Ago
  • Jumping Spiders: With Cute Eyes And Complex Behavior, They’re Nature’s Most Charismatic Arachnids
  • Scientists Dropped A Cow Carcass 1,629 Meters Into The South China Sea – And 8 Unexpected Visitors Turned Up
  • A Colossal Moa: One Of The Biggest Birds Ever To Walk The Earth Becomes 5th “De-Extinction” Species
  • Aliens Up To 200 Light-Years Away Could Find Earth Thanks To Our Airports
  • For The First Time, Wild Rays Have Been Filmed Telling Sharks To “Back Off!” With Electric Shocks
  • Gonorrhea Vaccines, New Antibiotics, And At-Home Testing: What’s The Latest In STI Research?
  • What NASA’s Galileo Spacecraft Saw As It Plunged Into Jupiter
  • Very Hungry “Plastivore” Caterpillars Get Fat From Eating Plastic
  • “Nobody Expected This”: Earth’s Rotation Will Speed Up Tomorrow, Bucking The Downward Trend
  • Chimps Are Sticking Grass In Their Ears And Rears As They Embrace “Pointless” Fad
  • Hui Te Rangiora: Old Māori Legend Suggests They May Have Discovered Antarctica 1,000 Years Before Europeans
  • “Potential Impact On Saturn”: Astronomers Appeal For Help As Video Appears To Show Object Hitting The Gas Giant
  • What Is Prosopometamorphopsia? The “Exceedingly Rare” Condition That Made A Patient See Faces As Dragons
  • Are We In An Enormous Void? It Could Explain What’s Wrong With Our Model Of The Universe
  • Woylies Boing Back Into Western Australia Thanks To Groundbreaking Wildlife Project
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version