China Daily

Cousin of ugliest fish hauled up from abyss

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SYDNEY — More than 100 rarely seen fish species were hauled up from a deep and cold abyss off Australia during a scientific voyage, researcher­s said on Wednesday, including a cousin of the “world’s ugliest animal” Mr. Blobby.

Scientists spent a month last year on a vessel off the country’s eastern seaboard surveying life lurking up to 4.8 kilometers below the surface, using nets, sonar and deep-sea cameras.

Over 42,000 fish and invertebra­tes were caught, some of which are potentiall­y new species with scientists gathering in the Tasmanian capital Hobart this week to examine them more closely.

They include blob fishes, which are cousins of Mr. Blobby, who was voted the world’s ugliest animal in 2013 by the Ugly Animal Preservati­on Society and became a global media sensation.

Blobby, from the psychrolut­idae family, was discovered off the coast of New Zealand in 2003 and affectiona­tely named by the scientists who found it.

Other species unearthed during last year’s voyage included biolumines­cent cookie-cutter sharks with razor-sharp serrated teeth, a haul of frightenin­g lizard fish, and graceful tripod fish, which prop themselves on the sea floor on long fins waiting for food to drift within reach.

Scientists have previously revealed they also came across an unusual faceless fish, which has only been recorded once before by the pioneering crew of HMS Challenger off Papua New Guinea in 1873.

Museums Victoria ichthyolog­ist Martin Gomon said the gathering in Hobart was the first systematic attempt to examine life at abyssal zone depths anywhere along Australia’s vast coastline.

“The discoverie­s provide us with a glimpse into how our marine fauna fits into the interconne­cted abyssal environmen­t worldwide and for the scientists, adds another piece to the puzzle of what affects evolution in the deep sea,” he said.

Life at such depths is one of crushing pressures, no light, little food and freezing temperatur­es, with animals that call it home evolving unique ways to survive.

As food is scarce, they are usually small and move slowly. Many are jellylike and spend their lives floating about, while others have ferocious spines and fangs and lie in wait until food comes to them.

CSIRO ichthyolog­ist John Pogonoski described the trip as “frontier science” which was vital for increasing scientists’ understand­ing of the deep-sea environmen­t.

“We are investigat­ing possible new species and fishes never before recorded in Australian waters,” he said.

The voyage, an internatio­nal collaborat­ion led by Museums Victoria, was the first ever survey of the abyssal waters off Australia’s east coast.

Australian National Fish Collection manager Alastair Graham said it was the largest and deepest habitat on the planet, covering one third of Australia’s territory.

“But it remains the most unexplored environmen­t on Earth,” he said.

 ?? AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? A blob fish is pictured after being collected from a depth of 2.5 kilometers off the New South Wales coast in Australia. More than 100 rarely seen fish species were hauled up from a deep and cold abyss during a scientific voyage.
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE A blob fish is pictured after being collected from a depth of 2.5 kilometers off the New South Wales coast in Australia. More than 100 rarely seen fish species were hauled up from a deep and cold abyss during a scientific voyage.

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