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Marine census: Surprising number of creatures bipolar
Preview of massive international census gives fuller count, shows some sea species at both poles
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COLD WATER DWELLERClione limacina is one of the creatures catalogued during a recent Census of Marine Life that focused on Arctic and Antarctic waters. View Marine Census Image GalleryIMAGE CREDIT: Kevin Raskoff/ArCOD

View Marine Census Image Gallery

Enough with the supposed underwater deserts, say polar census workers.

Arctic and Antarctic waters may look scarily hostile for living things. But a preview of a massive count of sea life reports some 13,000 kinds of animals living at one pole or the other, or, in a surprising number of cases, at both.

An international research collaborative called the Census of Marine Life released a glimpse of its findings on February 15, due out in finished form in 2010. Starting in 2000, hundreds of academic and government researchers have been  working to fill in the considerable gaps in information about what has been, is now or will probably be living in the world's oceans. Including exploration inspired by the International Polar Year, which ends in March 2009, Census scientists have made more than a dozen expeditions to explore life at each pole.

So far Antarctic tallies for the Census have reached some 7,500 animal species, a thousand or two more than were known before, says Julian Gutt of the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research in Bremerhaven, Germany. He coordinated the science on nerve-testing, round-the-clock research marathons in the Antarctic.

For the Arctic, expeditions have logged around 5,500 kinds of sea animals, including some 235 that appear to be the same as residents at the opposite end of the planet, says Russ Hopcroft of the University of Alaska Fairbanks. He didn't get much sleep either, as co-leader of more than a dozen research trips into the Arctic.

For the bipolar species, "this number has been much larger than we expected," Hopcroft says. Some of them, such as gray whales and the seabirds, move around easily, and some, such as one of the little Crustacea called copepods, show up just about anywhere there's seawater. But others, such as two snail-like species that have become almost as filmy as jellyfish and flutter through seawater instead of crawling, are not known from anywhere in between the poles.

One of these bipolar pteropods, Clione limacina, "looks really cute," Hopcroft says. But its rounded end hides chainsaw-fierce tentacles that it buzzes into the small shell cavity of another bipolar pteropod, Limacina helicina, for food.

News of so many possible shared species between the poles interests Amélie Scheltema, a systematist studying mollusks. "Genetic work is going to have to be done though," she cautions, to see whether the populations just look alike but actually function as separate species. (Hopcroft and Gutt agree, and molecular work is on the way.)

Gutt also says he's looking forward to asking deeper questions about species diversity, such as whether it's favored or suppressed by the fast-changing vs. the barely changing parts of the polar environments.


Found in: Biology, Ecology and Life
Comments 10
  • If it's a surprise to you how many creatures out there are bipolar, you've never been married.
    mb stone mb stone
    Feb. 15, 2009 at 9:03pm
  • I'm sorry, is it just me or is this quite easy to explain. I'm a physisist by nature and so correct me if i'm wrong but as we all know, during a point in time the world was covered in ice, allowing these creatures to exist everywhere. so when the ice receeded, they then became trapped at the poles.
    La Kias La Kias
    Feb. 16, 2009 at 7:06pm
  • La Kias,

    That is not the reason they are at both poles. As I assume that your frozen ocean fact is true, when the ice receded, the two animals of the same species would have been seperated permanently, like you said. But...the point of time that the ice receded would have been thouands or even millions of years ago. In that span of time, the two groups of the same species that were seperated in the first place would have evolved into two seperate species. I think that they are not just isolated at the poles and that there is a mode of tranportation for them that maybe involves there eggs and uses the coldness of the extreme depths of the ocean. Just a theory though.
    Tyler Albers Tyler Albers
    Feb. 19, 2009 at 3:58pm
  • I didn't see another possible source for the oxidation of iron in ancient seas - UV dissociation of water in the atmosphere. This is a process that supposedly robs Mars of it's atmospheric water. Is it a possibility here too? Before there was significant oxygen in the atmosphere, there would be no ozone layer to prevent UV light from reaching the surface.
    [Link was removed]
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    webalem net webalem net
    Dec. 19, 2009 at 3:06pm
  • Genetic disorders are often caused by sperm DNA that has double strand breaks, copy number variations, point mutations and imprinting mutations that have to do with advancing paternal age. Men need to know about their biological clock and father babies in their 20s and very early



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