The Mercury News

Monterey aquarium reveals exotic creatures of the deep

New $15 million exhibition highlights `beautiful and delicate and luminous' sea life

- By Paul Rogers progers@bayareanew­sgroup.com

“A lot of people think of these animals as scary, creepy or alien. But they aren't. They are beautiful and elegant and really mysterious. It's exciting to be able to show all of this to visitors and get them engaged with this whole other world.” — Beth Redmond-Jones, the aquarium's vice president of exhibition­s and facilities

Armor-plated pill bugs the size of dinner plates. Pulsating red jellyfish that look like beating hearts. Bone-eating worms that consume whale carcasses. Loopy coral seemingly drawn by Dr. Seuss.

The menagerie seems more fitting for a science fiction movie in outer space than something that lives nearby. Yet the bizarre creatures swim in Monterey Bay and other parts of the world's oceans — often thousands of feet below the surface in pitch-black, cold waters under immense pressure.

After spending years trying to figure out how to collect deep-sea creatures with unmanned robots and keep them alive in captivity, the Monterey Bay Aquarium is preparing to open a new exhibition revealing what lives below the mysterious depths of the world's oceans down to 10,000 feet below the surface.

The new $15 million attraction, called “Into the Deep: Exploring Our Undiscover­ed Ocean,” opens April 9 at the aquarium on Cannery Row, which was funded by Silicon Valley tech pioneer David Packard 40 years ago. As much an ode to the technology of marine exploratio­n as to the poetic magnificen­ce of some of the planet's most unusual life, the exhibition features animals that scientists have only recently discovered, and many which have never been shown before in aquariums anywhere in North America.

“The deep sea is the world's biggest habitat, but one of the least familiar,” said Stephen Palumbi, a marine biologist at Stanford University unaffiliat­ed with the exhibition. “It's dark and cold and deep, and there is very little food. Yet the animals there are beautiful and delicate and luminous with their own light. Bringing them to the surface is like us sending astronauts to space.”

When Packard, an electrical engineer who co-founded Hewlett Packard, and his wife, Lucile, donated $55 million to construct the Monterey Bay Aquarium in the 1980s, the goal was to showcase Central California's rich marine life, from sea otters to kelp forests, a longtime interest of the Packard family.

But personally, David Packard was

keenly interested in advancing the science of marine exploratio­n. With a $13 million donation in 1987 he founded MBARI — the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute — 20 miles north in Moss Landing. Since then, MBARI's scientists have discovered more than 200 ocean species using research ships, robotic subs, underwater chemistry labs and other cutting-edge gear.

Few other major ocean research centers in the world, including Woods Hole in Massachuse­tts and Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy in San Diego, have a world-class aquarium on their doorstep as a partner. Most of the animals in the Monterey aquarium's new deep-sea exhibition were collected by MBARI scientists, who now marvel at

the ability of aquarium curators to keep them alive in captivity.

George Matsumoto, a marine biologist at MBARI, discovered a new species of jellyfish in 2003, the bloody belly comb jelly. Magenta red and pulsating, it looks like a floating jewel in its new tank at the aquarium.

But it is remarkably fragile.

“If the aquarium had asked me if that was a good candidate to put in a tank in an exhibition, I would have said don't even try,” Matsumoto said. “When I was doing research, we would collect it, and I would be looking at it on the ship in the collection container, and it would melt and turn the water red. I described it using frame grabs from a video. I never had an intact specimen. I never saw it under a microscope. It was so sensitive to temperatur­e change, I thought it couldn't be displayed.

“But luckily, they went ahead and did it,” he said. “They have it on display here, and it's gorgeous. It's something people have never seen. The number of people in the world who have seen one alive in a container on a ship is probably less than two dozen, until this exhibition opens.”

The exhibition takes seawater from Monterey Bay, filters it and refreshes it in the tanks roughly every hour. The water for the deep-sea creatures is chilled to 39 degrees Fahrenheit. A maze of tubes, membranes and pumps uses nitrogen to reduce the oxygen level to 3% of the surface water, to mimic the conditions more than a mile below the sea.

Matsumoto said understand­ing more about the the world's oceans is important not just in inspiring the next generation of scientists but also in helping to protect the undersea world from climate change, plastic pollution and other environmen­tal changes.

“We are trying to learn how the ocean works,” he said, “hopefully before our tinkering gets out of control.”

Some things researcher­s cannot yet do. The more than 50 species exhibited are able to live at deep pressures and at surface pressure. Although MBARI and a few other scientific institutio­ns in Japan and France have been able to bring up deep-sea fish and other species that live only under immense pressure, exhibiting them to the public in an aquarium is not yet possible. Tanks have to be cleaned, animals have to be fed.

Among the marquee attraction­s at “Into the Deep” are the pink corals that live on deep-sea underwater mountains, and sea angels, tiny day-glo critters that are a type of swimming snail with wings. Giant spider crabs from Japan, which look like the face-hugging monster from the movie “Alien,” complete with legs 10 feet across, fill another tank.

The exhibition will be around for eight years and will change as MBARI researcher­s bring up new species.

“A lot of people think of these animals as scary, creepy or alien,” said Beth Redmond-Jones, the aquarium's vice president of exhibition­s and facilities. “But they aren't. They are beautiful and elegant and really mysterious. It's exciting to be able to show all of this to visitors and get them engaged with this whole other world.”

 ?? DOUG DURAN — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Left: A red paper lantern jellyfish swims in its tank at the Monterey Bay Aquarium's new “Into the Deep: Exploring Our Undiscover­ed Ocean” exhibit in Monterey. The exhibit, opening April 9, is the largest in North America focusing on deep-sea life. Top right: A mauve stinger. Lower right: A snow globe jellyfish.
DOUG DURAN — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Left: A red paper lantern jellyfish swims in its tank at the Monterey Bay Aquarium's new “Into the Deep: Exploring Our Undiscover­ed Ocean” exhibit in Monterey. The exhibit, opening April 9, is the largest in North America focusing on deep-sea life. Top right: A mauve stinger. Lower right: A snow globe jellyfish.
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 ?? DOUG DURAN — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? A Japanese spider crab crawls past a replica of a whale skull in its tank at the Monterey Bay Aquarium's new “Into the Deep” exhibit. It opens to the public April 9.
DOUG DURAN — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER A Japanese spider crab crawls past a replica of a whale skull in its tank at the Monterey Bay Aquarium's new “Into the Deep” exhibit. It opens to the public April 9.

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