Posted on 06/10/2005 10:08:15 AM PDT by cogitator
Giant Balls of 'Snot' Explain Ocean Mystery
By Bjorn Carey LiveScience Staff posted: 10 June 2005 06:22 am ET
Scientists have discovered giant sinking mucus "houses" that double the amount of food on the sea floor.
The mucus houses, or "sinkers," are produced by tadpole-like animals not much bigger than your index finger. As sinkers drop to the sea floor, small sea critters and other food particles get stuck to the mucus and end up on the bottom of the ocean.
For years scientists have observed loads of life at the bottom of the ocean. But they werent able to find enough food carbon to support all that life. Sinkers, previously overlooked, may help fill that gap.
"We have 10 years of data on sinkers, and using average figures from those years, we can account for twice as much carbon than sediment traps can measure below 1,000 meters," Rob Sherlock of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute told LiveScience.
The animals responsible for making sinkers are called giant larvaceans. They spin a mucus web, about a yard in diameter. They sit in the middle of the house and use it to filter food that is small enough for them to eat.
"Larger particles get stuck to the outside of these filters, and after some amount of time the filters get plugged and the animal moves out," Sherlock said. "The house deflates and begins to sink, picking up more particles. Its a fast-sinking carbon bomb."
Sherlock usually sees twice as many sinkers as active houses, and sometimes four to five times that amount. So how did they evade scientists for so long?
"A sinker is basically snot," Sherlock said. "Its very fragile. We have very skilled ROV (Remotely Operated Vehicle) pilots and special containers to collect these things. We were only able to adequately collect one out of four."
Theyre so fragile that sometimes just touching one causes it to rapidly break apart. Sinkers are particularly good at staying out of sediment traps the most common way of testing the amount of carbon food on the sea floor.
"Sometimes the sinker wouldnt pass through the traps filter, or would be broken up by it. Or people checking the traps would find this weird goop in the trap, and consider it to be contamination and throw it out," Sherlock said. "Plus, the odds of a sinker landing straight down into trap are fairly slim."
Sherlock and his colleagues have tried to observe larvaceans building the houses in a laboratory tank, but so far it has been difficult because the houses are so fragile.
"We just dont have a tank thats been designed well enough to observe the process," Sherlock said. "We do know that they build very rapidly for a short while, and they probably go through about one house a day."
These findings are published in June 9 issue of Science.
As Jim Carey would say, "...EEEEYYYYUMMMY..."
Sushi!
Well, that explains the Hillary/Dean mystery.
Giant snot balls on ocean floor....
I guess Teddy Kennedy's been swimming nearby.
I always thought they were fish eggs or leftovers from same..........Messy in a net.........
And what mystery would that be?..................
Snot balls. The basis of life...
That's really...gross...
"I found a moon rock in my nose"
"Egon, your mucous".
This is snot necessarily food for thought :p
Aw, you beat me to it--
I was just thinking the same thing!!
Where is the photo of this elusive critter? This is news to me and not something I have seen while scuba diving.
The animals responsible for making sinkers are called giant larvaceans. They spin a mucus web, about a yard in diameter. They sit in the middle of the house and use it to filter food that is small enough for them to eat.
As a scuba diver, I have never seen a mucus web that was a yard in diameter! Actually, the only mucus web that I have personally observed was around Parrot fish while they were sleeping at night.
However, "Marine Snow" is a major source of nutrients and is very common in the ocean. I personally purchase "Marine Snow" for my saltwater aquarium as a food source for some of my more difficult filter feeders.
If I were to classify what "Marine Snow" is like, green snot would be an excellent description.
Yes. But where did the snot come from?
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