Houston Chronicle

A land lubber’s guide to deep sea dining

- By Joanna Klein

YOU’LL never go to dinner in the deep sea. It’s dark, vast and weird down there. If the pressure alone didn’t destroy your landbound body, some hungry sea creature would probably try to eat you.

Fortunatel­y for you, something else has spent a lot of time down there, helping to prepare this guide to deep sea dining.

For nearly three decades, robots with cameras deployed by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute have glided through the ocean off the coast of central California at depths as deep as 2 1/2 miles below.

Cameras on these remotely operated vehicles captured the feeding habits of anything that didn’t flee them. They revealed 242 unique feeding relationsh­ips comprising 84 different predators and 82 different prey items. Building on prior research using other methods, these videos enhance understand­ing of the deep sea food web, particular­ly the jelly dishes and diners.

It was once thought that these wobbly mounds of water were not worth being eaten. But thanks to the cameras mounted on the researcher­s’ underwater probes — and elsewhere on

penguins, monk seals and sea turtles — we now realize that gelatinous animals aren’t just ravenous predators invading the ocean, but major food items in a complex web of interactio­ns.

You’re probably more familiar with that web as a chain, ending in the tuna on your dinner plate. That beautiful hunk of red meat was once a top predator. But if it weren’t for the food web deep under the ocean — a whole collection of crustacean­s, worms, fish, jellies and squids feasting on one another miles below the fishing boat that caught your tuna — there’d be no food to forage and no tuna to catch.

“It’s really exciting and really important,” said Anela Choy, a marine biologist at MBARI, who led the study published last month in Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B. “It’s taking a bigger view and allowing you to see a lot more of the connectivi­ty of the ocean ecosystem.”

So let’s go eat.

Find something to eat and grab it.

No one knows exactly what species one creature is, but Choy calls it a galaxy siphonopho­re. It waits in the water for whatever swims into its orange curtain of tentacles.

The deep sea can be a tough place to find food, and the creatures that live down here have adapted to its fickle abundance. They don’t just use tentacles to grab unwitting prey.

Consider detritivor­es, including crustacean­s and even some jellies that eat them: They munch on decaying organic matter called “marine snow” that sinks down to the bottom from sloppy feeders or phytoplank­ton near the surface. And the black swallower fish: It uses its big jaw to swallow prey bigger than itself whole, like a snake. These different species show there are diverse ways to fill your belly in an unforgivin­g environmen­t.

Learn to tolerate gory table manners.

One of the most common interactio­ns that Choy and her colleagues observed were cephalopod­s like the Gonatus, preying on fish.

Gonatid squid are abundant in midwaters and play the role of both predator and prey in the food web. Endowed with an insane metabolism, the voracious cephalopod­s are constantly eating. They dine on deep sea fish including lantern fish, owl fish and dragon fish.

The species ranges in size from 6 inches to 1 foot long, but it can consume fish bigger than its own body. To do so, the squid grasps onto its prey with tentacles lined with hooks and suction cups. Then it pierces the fish’s brain with its beak, which is creepily located right between the squid’s eyes. It bites off pieces of fish flesh, which it chews and swallows through an esophagus in the center of its brain.

Sometimes you have to eat your own kind.

A gonatid squid eats a gonatid squid. This kind of cannibalis­m is common in the deep sea. And for the squid it can be beneficial. By eating competitor­s from within its species, a Gonatus may free up more food and find more opportunit­ies to mate.

But they don’t just eat one another. Other species of squid, swordfish, bottle-nosed whales, sperm whales, hooded seal and other marine animals eat Gonatus too.

Eat just about anything.

A Solmissus is also called a dinner plate jelly because it’s the size and shape of one. But try to collect a ctenophore, and it will disintegra­te in your hands.

In the deep sea, jellyfish from the narcomedus­ae order are quite abundant. MBARI’s recordings revealed that they are major predators, consuming nearly two dozen different sea creatures including other gelatinous animals, especially ctenophore­s or comb jellies, worms and krill.

Hopefully you’re not allergic to shellfish.

Crustacean­s, hard-bodied creatures like krill and shrimp, are like dinner rolls of the deep sea. They’re always around, and practicall­y everyone eats them.

One lobate ctenophore eats krill. But their appetites for crustacean­s are nothing compared with physonect siphonopho­res, gelatinous animals that live in long chains.

Some eat all kinds of crustacean­s, the researcher­s found, but Nanomia, siphonopho­res that are quite abundant off the central California coast, feed almost exclusivel­y on krill — just like a filter-feeding whale.

 ?? Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute photos via The New York Times ?? A crew deploys a deep-sea instrument, ROV Ventana, used to observe wildlife. After studying decades of video footage captured by robotic submersibl­es, the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute has figured out some basics of the deep ocean’s food web.
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute photos via The New York Times A crew deploys a deep-sea instrument, ROV Ventana, used to observe wildlife. After studying decades of video footage captured by robotic submersibl­es, the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute has figured out some basics of the deep ocean’s food web.

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