New Wave Media

January 13, 2017

Scientists Find Life at Unexplored Ocean Depths

  • (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute)
  • (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute)
  • (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute)
  • (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute)
  • (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute)
  • (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute)
  • (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute)
  • (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute) (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute)
  • (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute) (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute)
  • (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute) (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute)
  • (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute) (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute)
  • (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute) (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute)
  • (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute) (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute)
  • (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute) (Photo: Schmidt Ocean Institute)

With a brand new ROV in tow, a team of leading geologists, chemists and biologists recently returned to the largely unexplored Mariana Back-Arc to search for life at depths greater than 13,000 feet.

 
Led by Dr. David Butterfield, JISAO, University of Washington, and Dr. William Chadwick, NOAA-PMEL and Oregon State University, the group returned to the Back-Arc for the second phase of a two-part exploration of the region. In 2015, the team of scientists located new hydrothermal vents in the Back-Arc region, including evidence of recent lava flows. This year, the team returned to these vent systems aboard research vessel Falkor with the new remotely operated vehicle (ROV) SuBastian to characterize their water chemistry and biodiversity. The new results fill a gap in knowledge about the biogeography of these unique deep-sea ecosystems and has implications for how tectonic setting influences the composition of chemosynthetic animal communities worldwide.
 
The new vent sites have spectacular chimneys made of sulfide minerals, some up to 30 meters tall. The chimneys were belching smoky vent fluid at temperatures up to 365°C and were covered with vent animals including “hairy snails,” shrimp, crabs, mussels, limpets, squat lobsters, anemones and polychaete worms. Scientists on board Falkor suspect that some new species have been discovered at the new sites, but confirmation will have to await further study back on shore. The new observations show that the newly discovered vent sites have an ecosystem that is characteristic of the Mariana Back-Arc, with some animal species found nowhere else on Earth. This, despite the fact that each vent site is relatively small and isolated, being separated from the others by up to 100 miles. The new observations suggest that the Back-Arc vent sites are relatively long-lived and that each site has biological “connectivity” with the others despite the long distances. The study also confirmed that the Back-Arc ecosystems are distinct and different from the nearby Volcanic Arc hydrothermal ecosystems, supporting the idea that geological and chemical environment play a key role in selecting animal community composition at hydrothermal vents.
 
This is the first series of scientific dives for ROV SuBastian. Equipped with numerous cameras, including a high-definition 4K video camera, the dives were live streamed onto YouTube and watched by millions. The multidisciplinary team will continue to analyze the data and samples collected during this expedition to advance research on how life thrives on these extreme deep-sea hydrothermal vents. This research was supported by the NOAA Ocean Exploration and Research Program, the NOAA Pacific Islands Regional Office, the National Geographic Society and the Schmidt Ocean Institute.
 
National Geographic SocietyNational Oceanic and Atmospheric AdministrationOregon State University
The February 2024 edition of Marine Technology Reporter is focused on Oceanographic topics and technologies.
Read the Magazine Sponsored by

Podcast: Deep Dive with Rhonda Moniz

Marine Technology Magazine Cover Mar 2024 -

Marine Technology Reporter is the world's largest audited subsea industry publication serving the offshore energy, subsea defense and scientific communities.

Subscribe
Marine Technology ENews subscription

Marine Technology ENews is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

Subscribe for MTR E-news