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Never-before-seen fish found more than 3 miles under the sea

Scientists Down Under went to new depths to see a world never-before explored with human eyes.

Australian researchers searched deeper than scuba divers and submarines could go. Cameras explored the frigid sea bottom, under enormous pressure, down to 3.6 miles under the surface.

And look what they found… 

“There are wonderful things that live in the Twilight Zone with bioluminescence, lights and big fangs,” Dianne Bray, Senior Collections Manager at the Museums Victoria Research Institute in Australia, told FOX Weather. “The deep sea is our least known environment, and we captured just a tiny amount.”

The “Twilight Zone” sits on massive, ancient volcanoes, now seamounts, that are 40 to 120 million years old. The largest mountains in Australia, above or below water, can be 42 miles across, and the only surface evidence of them is the tiny, tippy-tops that we know as Christmas and Cocos (Keeling) Islands. The area is Australia’s newest Marine Parks, designated in March.

“And the seamounts get studded with these enormous monsters, and yet we know nothing about them,” explained Tim O’Hara, chief scientist of the mission, before his 35-day journey to the unknown. “No scientific expedition has been there to look at the biology or the fauna down there. So we’ll be the first.”

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Fish
Australian scientists explored the ocean depths 3.6 miles below the surface. Museums Victoria Research Instit
Blind eel
They discovered many new species of fish. Museums Victoria Research Instit
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This toothy eel is one of the hundreds of unidentified species scientists found on this trip.
One of the hundreds of unidentified species discovered by scientists on this trip. Museums Victoria Research Instit
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They welcomed the never-before-seen blind eel. It is covered in loose, transparent and gelatinous skin. 

“They’re also livebearers. So the females give birth to live young,” Bray marveled at the oddity in fish. “So they really don’t have any dispersal mechanisms. They don’t have larvae that get carried around in the current.”

The blind eel was just one of the hundreds of specimens that O’Hara and his team brought back to the Institute.

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This pancake urchin flattens like a pancake when out of water.
This pancake urchin flattens like a pancake when out of water.Museums Victoria Research Instit
The tripod fish stands stationary on its three ray fins to feed.
The tripod fish stands stationary on its three ray fins to feed.Museums Victoria Research Instit
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“We expect maybe a third of all the animals that will bring back will be new species,” said O’Hara.

Bray’s favorite find is the tripod fish.

“Those amazing deep-sea fishes that stand high up off the seafloor on their long, thin fin rays and face into the current to feed,” said Bray. 

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This is a type of flat fish. During development, one eye migrated to the other side of its body.
During this fish’s development, one eye migrated to the other side of its body. Museums Victoria Research Instit
Fish
Scientists estimate 1/3 of the fish discovered will be new species. Museums Victoria Research Instit
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Fish
Researchers said the deep sea is “our least-known environment.”Museums Victoria Research Instit
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“They’re not only just hermaphrodites, they’re simultaneous hermaphrodites. So they have a functional ovotestis, which is a pretty interesting reproductive strategy and a great one for life in the deep sea where animals are rare,” continued Bray. “So maybe they only have to meet one other fish to mate.”

The fish have fully formed ovaries and testes complete with sperm. They can not inseminate themselves, but they can inseminate any other tripod fish.

The unique oceanography of the area evolved creatures with wholly specialized features. 

“The Cocos Keeling Islands area is a really interesting area because it receives currents from Africa, from the western Indian Ocean and also from the Pacific,” Bray explained. “We were trying to work out what kinds of animals live there that are unique to this region and what animals are fairly widespread.” 

Curator Tim O'Hara in Marine Vertebrate research laboratory holding a specimen jar containing Brittle Stars
Tim O’Hara the chief scientist of the mission said we know “almost nothing about” the species that live in the deep sea. Museums Victoria Research Instit

Take a look at the Sloan’s Viperfish with huge fangs that are visible even when its mouth is closed. They sport rows of light organs along with one at the tip of their long upper fin with which to attract prey.

Among pumice stones that are likely from Krakatoa’s 1883 eruption in Indonesia, you can also find the Slender Snipe Eel. It has a long tail that can stretch over 3 feet in length. The tail is similar to a thread, though. The entire animal weighs under 2 ounces.

The pancake sea urchin, with its poison-tipped spines, flattens out, like a pancake when out of water.

The institute collects DNA and then maps and traces the species’ biogeography and evolution to not only learn about the world humans share with animals but learn how to better coexist with nature.

“So it’s a really important role that something that museums alone are capable of doing. There’s still parts of the world that are completely unknown,” said O’Hara. “This is like the wild west of Australia, it’s just it’s an unknown territory. And so, to be the first person or the first group of people to go there and explore this area in detail is a privilege. And it’s a very exciting endeavor.”

The team mapped the ocean floor with high-tech multibeam sonar and cameras. Nets and sleds collected samples that are now being studied.