Tuesday, 5 October 2010

A Decade Long Marine Census Comes To An End

Yeti Crab - Census of Marine Life

The Census of Marine Life which started in 2000 has finally been completed. It is estimated that during the census 20,000 new species have been discovered, bringing the number of known species to nearly 250,000. The decade long project cost £413m and aimed to find out what lived, lives and will live in the oceans. It involved more than 540 expeditions with over 2,700 researchers and used many new types of technology. Fish were tagged and seals were fitted with monitors to record when they dived. Acoustic systems were used to measure fish populations.

Dr Ian Poiner, the chairman of the project’s scientific steering committee, told the BBC “All surface life depends on life inside and beneath the oceans”. This is literally true because we know that life evolved from the oceans and the very first life forms were aquatic organisms. Back then the atmosphere did not have everything they needed to survive but the water did. It was a while before the air contained the nutrients that were needed but eventually life began to evolve on earth. It is thought that there could still be many undiscovered species in the oceans and there could be at least a million of them in total.

Many wonderful species have been discovered during this census, including a Jurassic Shrimp that has thought to have been extinct for at least 50 million years and a crab which has been named the Yeti Crab (see the picture at the top of this post). However, it wasn’t just large organisms that Dr Poiner’s project looked for. The census included trying to tell tiny microbes apart using genetic sequencing. If you thought that a million organisms was a lot then you will be surprised at how many different types of microbes are thought to be in the water – one billion. Hopefully the Census of Marine Life will serve as a base for us to build on to try and preserve marine life.

Source - MSN News

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