Scientific News Biology To unknown science animals and plants FISHING FOR PHOTOS OF RARE OR UNKNOWN DEEP-SEA CREATURES WITH AN ELECTRONIC JELLYFISH LURE
FISHING FOR PHOTOS OF RARE OR
UNKNOWN DEEP-SEA CREATURES WITH AN ELECTRONIC JELLYFISH LURE
Harbor Branch researcher deploying
innovative camera system in Monterey Bay
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Atolla jellyfish and its
bioluminescent display.
Click here
for high-resolution image.
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MONTEREY, CALIF.--Using a new lighted jellyfish
lure and a unique camera system, researchers from HARBOR BRANCH are working to
reveal for the first time life in the deep sea unaltered by the cacophony of
sound and light that have been an integral part of most past research there.
From Sept 2-5 a team will be using the lure for the first time in the dark
depths of California's Monterey Bay.
"We are hoping to do some honest to goodness
unobtrusive observation, which really hasn't happened in the ocean," says
Dr. Edith Widder, head of HARBOR BRANCH's Biophotonics Center and project leader,
"Ultimately the goal is to see animals or behaviors nobody has ever seen
before."
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Dr. Edith Widder and the Eye in the
Sea system
Click here
for high-resolution image.
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The deep sea makes up about 78% of the planet's
inhabitable volume, but little is known about most of its inhabitants, more than
half of which are capable of making their own light, or bioluminescence. This
scientific deficiency stems from not only a lack of exploration and study of the
oceans, but also from less than ideal traditional research methods. Deep-towed
nets can shred animals like jellyfish or damage captured animals to the point
that their natural behaviors cannot be observed in the lab. Manned submersibles
and remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) can deliver humans to the depths in person
or virtually to observe some animals in their natural environment. However, they
typically do not allow researchers to see animals' natural behaviors because the
lights, motors and electric fields such vehicles bring with them are more than
enough to either scare animals away before they're ever seen or frighten them
into unnatural behavior.
To get around such problems, Dr. Widder dreamed
of and then, in partnership with the institution's Engineering Division, created
an innovative camera system to record life in the abyss unobtrusively. Called
"Eye in the Sea," the system is designed to operate on the seafloor
automatically and, most importantly, unnoticed by animals. The system can detect
animals nearby when they give off bioluminescent light, trigger a video camera
to record the light being produced, then turn on a red light out of the animals'
normal vision range to take illuminated footage. The system can also be
programmed to film surrounding areas at scheduled intervals, for instance when
the team places the system on the bottom along with bait to attract animals. In
the past camera systems used on the seafloor have relied on bright and, for
those creatures accustomed to the darkness of the depths, frightening lights.
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Hagfish harrassing a shark
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for high-resolution image.
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The Eye in the Sea has been tested alone during
brief deployments, and has already captured unusual interactions, such as a
primitive hagfish annoying a shark (photo available). Widder now plans to take
the deep-sea observation work one step further by deploying the camera system
along with a simple electronic device designed to mimic the various
bioluminescent light patterns given off by jellyfish known as Atolla. Various
Atolla species are common in the deep sea and look something like a tie-dye
splotch when their round bodies are viewed from above. The artificial jellyfish
lure is a round disc about six inches across with a ring of blue LED lights
around its outer edge that can be programmed to light up in patterns similar to
those created by the jellyfish.
Widder hopes the lure will allow her to test
various hypotheses about how and why animals such as jellyfish use their
bioluminescent light. For instance, when threatened, the jellyfish sometimes
respond by creating a circular wave of light around their outer edge that
progresses like the lights on a movie marquis. Scientists call this a "burglar
alarm" response and theorize that jellyfish use it to attract large animals
in to eat whatever animal is attacking the jellyfish. To test that theory and
others, the team will deploy the Eye in the Sea next to a box of bait along with
the artificial jellyfish, which will be programmed to produce various displays,
to see how animals in the area respond. The jellyfish lure could also attract
large predators to the area, which would be captured on film.
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Atolla
Jellyfish
Click here
for high-resolution image.
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The team will be deploying the equipment at
a depth of about 700 meters (2300 feet) in the Monterey Canyon using the Ventana
ROV, owned and operated by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (http://www.mbari.org/),
where Widder is also an adjunct researcher. They will head to the site aboard
MBARI's Point Lobos research vessel on Sept. 2 for the first deployment, and on
subsequent days bring the equipment to the surface to download video then
redeploy for more recording on the seafloor.
On future expeditions, Widder hopes to leave the
systems deployed on the seabed at various sites for long time periods to get a
more complete view of life in the deep.
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HARBOR BRANCH Oceanographic Institution was
founded in Ft. Pierce, Fla., in 1971 to support the exploration and conservation
of the world's oceans. The institution has held to this mission and grown into
one of the world's leading oceanographic institutions with a 500-acre campus,
over 200 personnel, and a fleet of sophisticated research ships and submersibles.
For more information about HARBOR BRANCH please visit: www.hboi.edu/media.
Contact: Mark Schrope, schrope@hboi.edu,
772-216-0390, Harbor
Branch Oceanographic Institution
The source of the given news and copyrights
belong to
the Harbor
Branch Oceanographic Institution
Publishing date: September 9, 2003
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