BFF-34 3 ‘hardcore’ fish species discovered on Pacific floor

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SCIENCE-ENVIRONMENT-OCEANS-FISH-SPECIES

3 ‘hardcore’ fish species discovered on Pacific floor

PARIS, Sept 15, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Scientists have discovered three new
species of “hardcore” fish living in one of the deepest parts of the ocean,
the see-through, scale-free creatures perfectly adapted to conditions that
would instantly kill most life on Earth.

An international team of researchers used state-of-the-art underwater
cameras to find the new fish at the bottom of the Atacama Trench in the
eastern Pacific Ocean at a depth of 7,500 metres (24,600 feet) — and were
surprised at their abundance in such an inhospitable environment.

“These things are right on the limit of what all fish can take so you
might expect at that depth you’d maybe be lucky to see one or two eking out
an existence,” Alan Jamieson, senior lecturer in marine ecology at Newcastle
University told AFP on Friday.

“But there’s a whole heap of them sitting there.”

Temporarily named the pink, blue and purple Atacama snailfish, the
previously unknown creatures are 20-25 centimetres (8-10 inches) long,
translucent and have no scales.

They appear to be uniquely adapted to conditions four-and-a-half miles
beneath the ocean surface, where the days are permanently pitch black and
water temperatures barely top two degrees Celsius (36 Farenheit).

At such depths, the pressure is so great that larger animals would be
crushed under their own mass.

“It’s the equivalent of having an 800-kilogramme weight placed on your
little finger,” Jamieson said.

– Gel-like –

Researchers believe the fish may have evolved to live on the sea floor to
avoid larger prey.

“The hardest structures in their bodies are the bones in their inner ear,
which give them balance, and their teeth,” said Thomas Linley, a Newcastle
research associate who went on the expedition.

In fact, being made almost entirely of a gel-like substance, the fish
would die without the crushing pressure holding them together.

“Their bodies are extremely fragile and melt rapidly when brought to the
surface,” Linley said.

– Crushing pressure, little food –

The Atacama Trench runs almost 6,000 kilometres along the west coast of
South America and bottoms out at 8,000 metres.

Jamieson said the team’s discovery should give hope to researchers working
to uncover new species in some of the least-explored corners of our planet.

“The finding of new species is not limited to small stuff in the mud or
tiny jellyfish, here there are three species of fish about 20-25 cm long,” he
said.

“The Atacama Trench is the same size as the Andes mountain range. If we
can put a camera down and pick out three new species within a matter of
days… these things are not rare — they are just out of reach.”

With over 300 known varieties of snailfish, Jamieson said it has adapted
to a wide variety of conditions, some extremely tough to survive in.

“Most of them live at shallow levels — we even get them up the Tyne River
in Newcastle. They’re an amazing family that has sort of evolved to fit every
niche, every corner of the planet,” he said.

He nevertheless admitted to being impressed with the newly discovered
varieties and their ability to thrive in some of the harshest environments on
Earth.

“The water temperatures in these trenches are always less than 2C — that
in itself is pretty hardcore, let alone slamming 800-bar pressure on it and
hardly any food,” he said.

BSS/AFP/BZC/1920HRS