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AMPHIPOD 2

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The University of Aberdeen

3 nov 2006
This amphipod was caught in
the Antarctic deep sea

naturefootings.com

 

Diving Under Arctic Ice With Amphipod

Description:  Diving Under Arctic Ice With Amphipod

Location: Ice, Arctic Iceflow, Arctic Ice Cap, North Pole, Russia, Canada, Under Polar Ice Cap, United States, Arctic
Source: DVCProHD 720p24
Master: HD Digital File 720p24

deepseanews.com

 

Amphipod Stops to Ask NASA for Directions

A pretty cool little discovery! Amphipod hanging out down below 600 feet of ice in an isolated Antarctic basin. Is it lost?? What are you doing there amphipod!? Of course this begs the question of where the heck is it getting its food from? Vents under the ice? Plesiosaur falls from a lost world?

At a depth of 600 feet beneath the West Antarctic ice sheet, a small shrimp-like creature managed to brighten up an otherwise gray polar day in late November 2009. This critter is a three-inch long Lyssianasid amphipod found beneath the Ross Ice Shelf, about 12.5 miles away from open water. NASA scientists were using a borehole camera to look back up towards the ice surface when they spotted this pinkish-orange creature swimming beneath the ice. Credit: NASA



The University of Aberdeen

 

‘Supergiant’ amphipods discovered 7 km deep

An expedition to one of the deepest places in the ocean has discovered one of the most enigmatic creatures in the deep sea - the ‘supergiant’ amphipod.

dailymail.co.uk



We’ll need a bigger barbecue! World’s biggest ‘prawn’ discovered as scientists find ELEVEN INCH crustacean in deep sea



A British expedition to one of the deepest parts of the ocean has discovered an enormous species of crustacean that looks like a prawn and is 11ins long.The so-called ‘supergiant’ – a type of  amphipod - was discovered more than four miles below the surface in waters north of New Zealand.

Most amphipods are usually 0.8in-1.2in long. But the new specimen, found by a team from the University of Aberdeen, was ten times the size.

Using submergence cameras and a large trap designed by the university's Oceanlab, the crew was able to explore up to depths of six miles.

They were hoping to find specimens of deep-sea snailfish, which have been photographed before but have not been seen since the 1950s.
Expedition leader Alan Jamieson said: ‘The moment the traps came on deck, we were elated at the sight of the snailfish as we have been after these fish for years.
‘However, seconds later I stopped and thought 'What on earth is that?' whilst catching a glimpse of an amphipod far bigger than I ever thought possible.
‘It's a bit like finding a foot-long cockroach.’
Seven specimens were caught in the trap and up to nine were photographed gathering around the camera system.

Scientists say the term ‘supergiant’ was coined by U.S .researchers when they found some large amphipods in the early 1980s.

The supergiant amphipod has not been reported since and has faded into the realms of rare and mysterious deep-sea creatures.
Dr Jamieson said: ‘The surprising thing is that we have already been to this deep trench twice and never come across these animals before.
‘In fact, a few days after the discovery, we deployed all the equipment again on the same site and we didn't photograph or capture a single supergiant. They were there for a day and gone the next.’
The researchers said the newly found amphipods are the biggest whole specimen of supergiant caught, and have never been seen so deep in the sea.

New Zealand's National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research also took part in the expedition.

Ashley Rowden, from the Wellington-based institute, said: ‘It just goes to show that the more you look, the more you find.
Dr Rowden added: ‘For such a large and conspicuous animal to go unnoticed for so long is just testament to how little we know about life in New Zealand's most deep and unique habitat.’
Researchers will try to establish whether the new samples are the same species as those found by the U.S. scientists near Hawaii in the 1980s.
An expedition to one of the deepest parts of the ocean has discovered a ‘supergiant’ species.

 

 

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