
Scientists have identified more than 110 new species found in deep water beyond the edges of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef.
In total, the number of new species is likely to surpass 200 as scientists sift through photos and specimens collected from the Coral Sea late last year. Discoveries include brittlestars, crabs, sea anemones, sponges, worms, rays, a ghost shark, and a deepwater catshark.
“During the voyage it was incredible to observe plenty of unique, deep-sea creatures in locations from seamounts and atolls to unexplored deep reefs,” said Will White, a shark expert with Australia’s Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation and chief scientist on the expedition.
Sea creatures were found as much as 10,000 feet deep in Coral Sea Marine Park, which sprawls across nearly 400,000 square miles of Australian waters and whose depths are largely unexplored. The deep ocean is home to “some of the most interesting and least known species,” said White.
Scientists carefully studied specimens in a series of workshops around Australia and undertook genetic testing to identify new species. The discoveries “reveal the extraordinary life in our oceans,” White said.
ALSO ON YALE E360
Species Slowdown: Is Nature’s Ability to Self-Repair Stalling?
LATEST POSTS
- 1
From Dread to Certainty: Individual Accounts of Strengthening - 2
Vote in favor of Your #1 sort of pie - 3
Humpback whale stranded on Germany's Baltic coast frees itself - 4
L.A.'s most famous midcentury home, the Stahl House, is on the market for the 1st time, at $11K per square foot: See inside - 5
Can scientists detect life without knowing what it looks like? Research using machine learning offers a new way
Doritos and Cheetos debut 'NKD' options, without artificial colors or flavors
Finding the Universe of Workmanship: Individual Encounters in Imagination
'Stranger Things' Season 5: When does Volume 2 come out? And Volume 3? Everything to know about the remaining episodes before the finale.
Arctic sea ice just dropped to an alarming new low
6 Monetary Arranging Administrations for Your Necessities
Who is Adm. Frank 'Mitch' Bradley and what does he have to do with the Venezuela boat strikes?
How Mars' ancient lakes grew shields of ice to stay warm as the Red Planet froze
Al-Sharaa denies he called for 80% of Syrians to return from Germany
NASA Artemis 2 astronauts to make historic moon flyby today. Here's what to expect hour by hour (timeline)












