Scientific News Biology To unknown science animals and plants NURSERIES IN THE DEEP SEA
NURSERIES IN THE DEEP SEA
MOSS
LANDING, California--Exploring a deep-sea
ridge off Northern California, scientists at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research
Institute (MBARI) have discovered a unique undersea nursery, where groups of
fish and octopus brood their eggs, like chickens on their nests. This is the
first time that marine biologists have directly observed any deep-sea fish
brooding its eggs. It is also the first time that two different types of mobile
deep-sea animals have been observed brooding together in the same area. Although
the scientists do not know exactly why the animals prefer this one area, they
believe that the nursery represents a new type of biological "hot spot"
(an area of intense biological activity).
MBARI scientist Jeff Drazen presented these
observations last week at the Deep Sea Biology Symposium in Coos Bay, Oregon.
His research is also featured in the current issue of Biological Bulletin, which
shows photographs of the brooding fish and octopus on its cover.
The undersea nursery was discovered and
documented using MBARI's remotely operated vehicle (ROV) Tiburon. Using video
tapes from Tiburon dives, Drazen and colleagues found that each summer, blob
sculpin (Psychrolutes phrictus) and deep-sea octopus (Graneledone sp.) gather
together at the crest of the Gorda Escarpment, off Northern California.
"The sculpin nests look like large splotches
of purple strewn across the surfaces of boulders," says Drazen. "The
parent fish is usually resting on the seafloor near or on top of the eggs. When
I first saw this in the video, I was surprised because no one had ever
documented such behavior in a deep-sea fish before." Blob sculpin are
typically about 60 cm (2 feet) long and shaped like large, flabby tadpoles.
Drazen estimates that some sculpin nests may contain up to 100,000 eggs. The
nursery area lies near the crest of an undersea rise, almost a mile below the
ocean surface.
MBARI geologists first encountered these nursery
areas in August 2000. While performing geological surveys with ROV Tiburon, they
noticed that octopus and blob sculpin were common near certain cold seeps, where
hydrocarbon-rich fluids seep out of the seafloor. When they returned to the
region in 2001, they brought along biologists, who realized that the octopus
were present in unusually large numbers. On one dive, the ROV also brought up a
rock sample which was covered with eggs. It wasn't until later, when Drazen
watched videotapes of these dives, that he realized both the fish and the
octopus might be brooding eggs. Intrigued, Drazen organized a third dive in July
2002, to count the animals and their eggs and to make more observations. The
high densities of animals measured in certain areas convinced Drazen that these
nurseries might qualify as biological hot spots.
Previously discovered biological hot spots in the
deep sea, such as hydrothermal vents and the tops of seamounts, have been
related to geological or topographic features that cause an increase the
availability of food. The nurseries on the Gorda Escarpment may represent a
totally different type of hot spot, where physical conditions particularly favor
the development of eggs. Drazen is still not sure what aspect of the physical
environment makes this spot so popular for brooding animals.
Whatever the key conditions may be, Drazen points
out that such areas are critical habitat for the species involved. He and his
co-authors are concerned that these undersea nurseries could be endangered by
commercial trawling or long-line fishing. Such fishing has expanded into the
deep sea as near-shore fish stocks have declined. For this reason, Drazen
suggests that reproductive hot spots such as this might qualify as areas to be
protected from fishing.
Finding one reproductive hot spot may also help
scientists discover other such areas. But as Drazen points out, "Unlike
hydrothermal vent and seamount communities, which persist for generations,
reproductive hot spots may be seasonal and transitory. This makes such sites
especially hard to find. We hope to learn more about why these animals aggregate
on the ridge and use this information to narrow our search for other important
nurseries in the deep sea."
###
Contact: Debbie Meyer, debbie@mbari.org,
831-775-1807, Monterey
Bay Aquarium Research Institute
The source of the given news and copyrights
belong to
the Monterey
Bay Aquarium Research Institute
Publishing date: September 9, 2003
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