Swarm of eels breaks record for most fish ever spotted at one time in abyssal ocean

This single frame shows the highest number of individuals of a single taxon, in this case a group of cutthroat eels (Ilyophis arx).
This single frame shows the highest number of individuals of a single taxon, in this case a group of cutthroat eels (Ilyophis arx). (Image credit: Leitner et al., Deep Sea Research/CC By 4.0)

Before we start mining for precious metals in the darkness of the deep sea, we might try switching on the light first and observing our surroundings.

In this seemingly isolated abyss, at deeper than 3,000 meters (9,800 ft) below sea level, scientists were able to coax a massive swarm of 115 cutthroat eels (Ilyophis arx) out of the shadows and into the light, and with only a relatively small package of bait.

"Our observations truly surprised us," says biological oceanographer Astrid Leitner, who worked on the research at the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa. 

"We had never seen reports of such high numbers of fishes in the sparsely-populated, food-limited deep-sea."

The Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ) is a massive expanse of seafloor that runs from Hawaii nearly to Mexico, and it contains some of the rarest and most highly demanded metals and elements on our planet. 

Over the years, it's drawn increasing interest from the mining industry, which sees this new region as a way to cut down on human labour and the destruction of precious land.

Sixteen contracts have already been issued for deep sea mining in more than 1 million square kilometers of this zone, and yet only a tiny portion of deep abyssal habitats have been sampled, explored, or even mapped by scientists.

It's decisions like this that have some scientists and environmentalists warning of a deep sea "gold rush" that could cause unforeseen damage to ecosystems we know very little about.

The abyssal plains that blanket the bottom of our oceans represent 70 percent of our planet's seafloor and are considered the largest ecosystem on Earth. 

But while these depths are generally thought to contain sparse life, with particularly few fish, that generalization might not apply to all the underwater mountain ranges – called seamounts – that border these valleys, emerging from the surrounding abyssal plain. 

Recent expeditions among submerged seamounts in the Galapagos and off the coast of Tasmania have revealed an unexpected abundance of life forms, many of which we've never seen before, and some dwell on these submerged summits that are still deep enough to be considered 'abyssal'. 

To figure out what's down there before we start unearthing sediment and spreading plumes of material kilometers away, an expedition of ocean scientists set out for three underwater seamounts in the CCZ and their surrounding plains.

It's hard to extrapolate from these brief encounters, but if the sheer number of eels observed in this study says anything about local abundance, then the density of life at these depths could be an order of magnitude higher than even our highest predictions thus far.

The current study tries to limit those influences by turning off the camera and light on occasion, but at the same time, this also means researchers probably undercounted how many fish actually came to feed. 

"Thus," the authors write, "the number of eels observed in this study at abyssal depths is truly unprecedented for both abyssal and bathyal depths." 

It's doubtful that all abyssal seamounts will host similarly large populations of fish. Even in the current study, the northernmost summit had fewer feeders.

"If this phenomenon is not just isolated to these two seamounts in the CCZ, the implications on deep sea ecology could be widespread," says Leitner, who now works at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute.

"Our findings highlight how much there is still left to discover in the deep sea, and how much we all might lose if we do not manage mining appropriately."

The study was published in Deep-Sea Research.

This article was originally published by ScienceAlert. Read the original article here.

Carly Cassella
ScienceAlert

Carly Cassella is a journalist at ScienceAlert with a background in neuroscience. Carly cut her journalistic teeth at Farrago magazine while studying as an undergraduate at the University of Melbourne. Previously, she worked at the International Federation of Journalists in Brussels, where she gained the utmost respect for war correspondents. Since then, she has worked in award-winning podcast production, taught a class on science writing at the 2018 March for Science conference, and has written multiple YouTube scripts with millions of views. Carly currently lives in Seattle, where she enjoys clamming, oystering, fern-ing and pretending she knows how to identify birds and stars.