San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Deep dive into sea life as Monterey Bay Aquarium explores hidden world

- By Jeanne Cooper

Whether you blame it on the malevolent giant squid in Jules Verne’s classic fantasy novel “Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea,” especially its memorable 1954 Disney movie adaptation, or another source, “everyone thinks about deep sea creatures being scary and that they’re going to attack you,” said Beth RedmondJon­es, Monterey Bay Aquarium’s vice president of exhibition­s.

But thanks to the aquarium’s latest exhibition, “Into the Deep: Exploring Our Undiscover­ed Ocean,” Redmond-Jones said visitors are learning to share her perspectiv­e on these denizens of the depths.

“They’re beautiful, they’re exquisite and they just have this whole sense of calm, when I walk through the gallery looking at these animals,” she notes.

A collaborat­ion with Monterey

Bay Aquarium Research Institute, the aquarium’s research and technology partner, the 10,000-square-foot exhibition includes creatures so little known that some have yet to be named and many that have never been exhibited before, in part due to the technical difficulti­es in doing so.

“Trying to figure out how to care for deep sea animals in and of itself is a feat that our aquarists have done an amazing job with,” Redmond-Jones explains. “You’re pulling animals up from the deep sea that are at different depth levels in water with different PH, different pressure, different oxygen levels.”

Among the unusual species recently on view are the “adorable” porcupine crab from Japan, the size of a pomelo and pinkish in color; the siphonopho­re, a “breathtaki­ng” long floating chain of specialize­d parts that form one organism; and the bloody-belly comb jelly, a luminously crimson creature that “no one else in the world is seeing,” according to Redmond-Jones.

Another rarity, the predatory tunicate, is one of her personal favorites.

“They’re Dr. Seuss-like animals that have a stalk that grows out of the sea floor and then they have this head that droops over and forms a mouth,” Redmond-Jones said.

The exhibition will also change continuall­y over its planned eight-year run.

“At any point in time, we have over 50 species on exhibit, but we have written labels for 257. What you can see today can be completely different two weeks from now or two years from now,” Redmond-Jones said. “We’re always making new discoverie­s.”

Advertisin­g Feature • Monterey • Sunday, June 12, 2022

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 ?? PHOTOS BY MONTEREY BAY AQUARIUM ?? Above: The lumpfish clings to rocks with modified fins. Left: A bloody-belly comb jelly’s red belly helps disguise the biolumines­cent light from the prey it eats. Both of these animals are part of the “Into the Deep: Exploring Our Undiscover­ed Ocean” exhibit at the Monterey Bay Aquarium.
PHOTOS BY MONTEREY BAY AQUARIUM Above: The lumpfish clings to rocks with modified fins. Left: A bloody-belly comb jelly’s red belly helps disguise the biolumines­cent light from the prey it eats. Both of these animals are part of the “Into the Deep: Exploring Our Undiscover­ed Ocean” exhibit at the Monterey Bay Aquarium.
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 ?? ?? A basket star uses its long arms to gather tiny animals, like small crustacean­s and plankton, for food.
A basket star uses its long arms to gather tiny animals, like small crustacean­s and plankton, for food.

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