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Antarctic census set to reveal new species: scientists

by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) Feb 20, 2008
An international project to document the sea life of Antarctica is likely to reveal new species among the dinner-plate sized sea spiders and other overgrown animals of the deep, scientists said Wednesday.

Researchers from the Australian, French and Japanese venture designed to complete a census of marine life in the icy Southern Ocean before it is degraded by global warming, have brought thousands of specimens back.

Martin Riddle, who led the voyage for the Australian ship scouring the ocean floor, said his seven-week expedition had collected "thousands and thousands" of animals and as many as 1,500 different species.

Asked if he expected to find new species among this haul, he said: "I would be very surprised if there weren't."

French and Australian scientists on the project have so far collected 75 different species of fish and, of these, about three or four were new to science, he said.

But he said once the entire catch was classified -- including sea worms and other smaller animals -- he expected about 10 percent to be previously unknown species.

The Australian scientists spent 20 days at sea, spending 24 hours a day in 12-hour shifts filming and collecting marine specimens of fish, sea urchins and more unusual animals such as the glass-like tunicates which grow up from the sea bed.

"In some places every inch of the sea floor is covered in life," Riddle said.

"In other places we can see deep scars and gouges where icebergs scour the sea floor as they pass by."

Much of what they found was oversized, as is expected in colder Antartica waters, with the voyage bringing home huge worms, giant crustaceans and large sea spiders.

"I was staggered by the size of things to be honest," said Riddle, who is a project manager at the Australian Antarctic Division.

Of the sea spiders, he said: "We were getting up many of these... where the leg spans were larger than a dinner plate."

Riddle said the census would be a reference point to monitor the impact of environmental change, such as rising carbon dioxide in the ocean as a result of increased global greenhouse gas emissions, on marine life.

The greater the amount of carbon dioxide in the water, the harder it becomes for marine organisms to grow skeletons and the impact is more pronounced in colder waters, he said.

"We know these effects are going to be seen first in Antarctica," he said.

"We need to know about it to begin to ring the warning bells."

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Antarctic Route Highlights New Ocean-Climate Links
Canberra, Australia (SPX) Feb 18, 2008
A Hobart-Antarctic shipping route has generated the longest continuous record of temperature and salinity changes in the Southern Ocean for scientists studying how the ocean controls global climate. Called SURVOSTRAL (Surveillance of the Ocean Austral), the joint Australian-French-US program has produced a 15-year dataset based on readings taken by the volunteers and crew of the 65-metre French ship, L'Astrolabe, on regular voyages between Hobart and the French base at Dumont D'Urville.







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