Scientists find 100s of new creatures on Australia's coral reefs

by Amy Judd | September 19, 2008 at 01:04 pm
1058 views | 29 Recommendations | 14 comments

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Jami in the coral reef

Jami in the coral reef

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Coral Reef Diving in South Pacific

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Coral Reef Diving in South Pacific

Scientists in Australia have discovered hundreds of new animal species of coral reefs, including tiny crustaceans.

They were found when members of the Australian chapter of CReefs, that is part of the Census of Marine Life, which is part of an international effort to catalogue of all ocean life.

"People have been working at these places for a long time and still there are literally hundreds and hundreds of new species that no one has ever collected or described," said Julian Caley, a scientist from the Australian Institute of Marine Science who is helping to lead the research.

"So in that sense, it's very significant in that if we don't understand what biodiversity is out there, we don't have much of a chance of protecting it," he said.

Scientists at several Australian museums have begun the complex process of working with the samples for genetic bar-coding and taxonomy, the formal system of naming living things. That work is expected to take years, Caley said.

Among the creatures researchers found were about 130 soft corals — also known as octocorals, for the eight tentacles that fringe each polyp — that have never been described in scientific literature, and scores of similarly undescribed crustaceans, including tiny shrimp-like animals with claws longer than their bodies.

The 10-year census, scheduled for final publication in 2010, is supported by governments, divisions of the United Nations and private conservation organizations.

The Australian researchers conducted three expeditions, one each in the waters off the Great Barrier Reef's Lizard and Heron islands, and one in the Ningaloo Reef, on Australia's northwest coast. Thousands of samples were collected during the three-week research trips, which took place between April and September.


Researchers plan to visit the three sites every year for the next six years to learn more about the soft corals found there, and to catalogue how many animal species live on the reefs and how they respond to interaction from humans.

The project marks the first time any group has made a concerted effort to understand the biodiversity of the Great Barrier Reef, said Ron Johnstone, a marine science professor at the University of Queensland who is familiar with the research.


recommend This comment thread is now closed
lgal3824
lgal3824
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 19:30 on September 19th, 2008

amyjudd, I like this story. It's good stuff.

patgarcia
patgarcia
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 20:33 on September 19th, 2008

amyjudd, I like this story. It's good stuff. Really beautiful.

0
mali_unaba

Nice article! I'm very thankfull to be abble to contribute with a picture of some shells, coral reefs and stones that I found in the beach while living in Asia.

mali_unaba has contributed a photo to this story.

0
Jordan Yerman

Good news indeed.

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Aiteas

It is hard to believe that this is a photograph, yet the incredible beauty of the coral reef is a rich tapestry of texture and color. This picture was a indigo and black shade with a white spark. Upon lightening it, I discovered all the elements of a masterpiece...natural creation.

Aiteas has contributed a photo to this story.

Paschen
Paschen
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 05:24 on September 20th, 2008

amyjudd, I like this story. It's good stuff.

0
entitee

So much has yet to be discovered in our oceans. I almost think it's better that way.

entitee has contributed a photo to this story.

0
Adam Taller

Acropora

Adam Taller has contributed a photo to this story.

0
Sr. Funesto

This photo belongs to a series where I play with scale with this little soldier. The photo was taken in Algarve, at the south of Portugal.

Sr. Funesto has contributed a photo to this story.

Rhonda J Mangus
Rhonda J Mangus
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 02:16 on September 22nd, 2008

amyjudd, I like this story. It's good stuff.

0
MFR110

This is a photo of a Bicolor Blenny (Ecsenius bicolor), found off the coasts of Sri Lanka, in the Indian Ocean.

MFR110 has contributed a photo to this story.

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kurry909m

I went scuba diving in East Malaysia this past summer mainly at Mabul Island and Sipadan Island. This particular photo was taken at Mabul Island and is one of my favorite coral reef spots. ~Keri (kurry909m)

kurry909m has contributed a photo to this story.

0
AkiraShima

From the reef tanks at PPG Aquarium at the Pittsburgh zoo.

AkiraShima has contributed a photo to this story.

0
campanaro

amyjudd,

What beautiful photos..

Top notch and thanks for all the info on our oceans.

Peace,

campanaro



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