High Seas and Seamounts of the Nazca Ridge
FKt240708 | 8 July – 9 August 2024 |#NazcaHighSeas 

This is the first time this rare octopus species – informally named the Casper octopus – has been seen in the Southern Pacific. Discovered in 2016 and nicknamed Casper, the species has not been scientifically described or formally named, as no one has collected a specimen yet. While little is known about this species, scientists do know that it is one of two octopuses found in the Ocean’s abyssal zone. This image was collected at 4,443 meters depth, almost three miles below the Ocean’s surface.

A team of Schmidt Ocean Institute oceanographers discovered and mapped a seamount, and scientists believe they may have discovered new marine species along the Nazca Ridge in international waters. The underwater mountain is 3,109 meters tall and supports a thriving deep-sea ecosystem. In addition to mapping the seamount, the team conducted an exploratory dive with an underwater robot on one of the mountain’s ridges, finding sponge gardens, ancient corals, and a charismatic walking red fish known as a Chaunocops. Throughout the expedition, sightings of elusive animals such as a Casper octopus and a Promachoteuthis squid thrilled the team and viewers following the Divestream from dry land. The octopus, one of only two species of deep-sea cephalopods, has yet to be scientifically described or formally named, and the squid sighting was particularly exciting because it was the first time humans had observed this animal alive.

This is the first footage of a live Promachoteuthis squid. Until now, the squid genus has only been characterized from dead samples found in nets. The squid was documented on Dive 693, while exploring an unnamed seamount (internally designated as T06) along the Nazca Ridge, off the coast of Chile. Credit: ROV SuBastian / Schmidt Ocean Institute

The 28-day expedition was also historic for being the first to be led by Schmidt Ocean Institute staff and crew, with scientists and hydrographers supported by our partners, Ocean Census and the Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping/Joint Hydrographic Center at the University of New Hampshire. Our Executive Director, Jyotika Virmani, and Marine Technician Tomer Keter served as co-chief scientists.

During this expedition, the science department discovered, mapped, and explored a new seamount with Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) SuBastian. The seamount covers an area of about 70 sq km. The summit depth is 994m, and the base is at 4,103m, giving it a prominence of 3,109m over the surrounding seafloor. Hydrographic experts used the Research Vessel Falkor (too)’s EM124 multibeam echosounder to map the seamount, located 700 nautical miles west of Chile in international waters. The ship’s crew has proposed a name currently under review with the GEBCO Subcommittee on Underwater Feature Names.Schmidt Ocean Institute

While exploring ten seamounts on the ridge, the team collected 20 suspected new species. Two previous expeditions in January and February documented over 150 previously unknown species and numerous range extensions for animals not previously known to live in this region. Prior to these expeditions, about 1,000 species were known to live in this portion of the Pacific Ocean. The number now exceeds 1,300. The species records will be sent to the Ocean Census, an international collaborative alliance founded by the Nippon Foundation and Nekton to accelerate the discovery and protection of ocean life, and the mapping data will be sent to the GEBCO database to be part of an overall seafloor map.

Living Fossils of the Atacama Trench
FKt240524 | 24 May – 6 June | #AtacamaTrenchAncients

A methane seep was documented on the seafloor during Dive 681.ROV SuBastian / Schmidt Ocean Institute

Researchers located Chile’s deepest and most northern cold seeps during this expedition. At 2,836 meters deep, the seeps provide chemical energy for deep-sea animals living without sunlight, offering potential insights into the conditions that led to the development of life on Earth.

The search for the seeps took over 12 hours, as scientists examined an area with geologic features that led them to suspect there might be seeps. Their investigation relied on seafloor mapping data and data interpretation from local and international experts. Like methane seeps, shallow cold seeps are usually located by finding bubbles coming from the ocean floor in sonar data. The bubbles are not always visible for deeper seeps, making locating them more challenging.

Stockton University Scientist Jessica Eberle stands in the Computer Electronics Lab in front of mapping and sonar displays, which they monitor to locate potential methane seeps.Alex Ingle / Schmidt Ocean Institute

“The microbes that live on these seeps have amazing strategies for producing food without sunlight,” said Expedition Co-chief Scientist Dr. Lauren Seyler of Stockton University, New Jersey, USA. “Here on Earth, life in the dark is alien in its own right and provides critical information for understanding how organisms persist under the most extreme conditions. We are still trying to figure out how life started on Earth, and environments that provide chemical energy for life, like this one, might offer clues about the spark that ignited all the biodiversity on our beautiful planet.”

ROV SuBastian prepares to take a core sample of seafloor contents. Dive 679 took place off the coast of Northern Chilé with the research team aiming to characterize the microbial and macrofaunal communities in the surrounding areas of the Atacama Trench. The primary objective of this dive was to explore the ridge area for methane seeps and collect samples (push cores, water, rock, and animal samples) at seepage sites.ROV SuBastian / Schmidt Ocean Institute

 

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