Tag

Deep Sea Ecology

All articles tagged with #deep sea ecology

5.3-million-year-old whale necropolis unveils ancient deep-sea cetacean evolution
science1 month ago

5.3-million-year-old whale necropolis unveils ancient deep-sea cetacean evolution

Scientists mapped a 1,200‑km stretch of the Diamantina Zone in the southeastern Indian Ocean, identifying five active whale falls and 476 fossil cetaceans dating back to at least 5.3 million years ago. The assemblage includes beaked- and baleen-whale remains, with new species such as Pterocetus diamantinae sp. nov., and hosts diverse sulfophilic communities on the carcasses. Strontium‑isotope dating places ages up to ~5.26 Ma, revealing a long-running deep-sea whale‑fall archive and suggesting a potential deep-sea “supercorridor” for chemosynthetic fauna across the region.

Decades-old toxic waste leaks reshape the deep-sea floor
environment4 months ago

Decades-old toxic waste leaks reshape the deep-sea floor

Decades after the U.S. dumped thousands of barrels of toxic waste into the Pacific, new findings show leaks are still altering the San Pedro Basin’s deep-sea sediment chemistry and microbial life. A 58-square-mile survey identified around 74,000 debris targets, including ~27,000 barrels, with halos of hardened minerals indicating alkaline leakage. The resulting high pH and altered microbial communities could affect deep-sea ecosystems for thousands of years, complicating cleanup and policy decisions; the study appears in PNAS Nexus.