Early in the nineteenth century, an English naturalist, Edward Forbes,
theorized that there was an azoic or lifeless environment in the ocean
deeper than about two thousand feet. However, as technology advanced,
broken submarine cables recovered from depths greater than five thousand
feet were found to be teeming with living organisms, many of which were
new to science. In the 1950's and later, collections from deep-water
zones, made both with collecting devices and through explorations by
scientists aboard submersibles, revealed fishes, snails, and other
animals in the deepest part of the world ocean, the Mariana Trench in
the southwest Pacific Ocean. This trench, at 6.8 miles deep, with
crushing pressure, near-freezing temperature, and complete absence of
light, supports life.
Deep-Sea Exploration
Scientists
exploring in submersibles such as Trieste and Alvin watched in wonder as
bizarre-looking fishes swam past the viewing ports. Many of the fishes
were brightly colored-red and orange- and most of them featured light
organs on their skin, glowing or flashing a bioluminescent light in the
otherwise total darkness. Some of the fishes were equipped with body
parts which resembled fishing rods and lures. The advent of submersibles
offered the promise that someday soon, scientists might actually see
one of the mythical sea monsters. This was not to be. Most of the
strange-looking fishes were in many cases only a few inches long.
Gulpers and Anglers
In the lightless depths of the sea there is no primary production of
food from plants as there is in the surface waters. Thus, the deep-sea
fishes depend for food on whatevermaydescend fromsurface waters. A dead
whale drifting down is a bonanza of nutrition to the organisms below.
However, many of the deep-water fishes are unable to handle such large
matter and are reduced to eating each other: their own kind or even a
larger neighbor. The gulpers are remarkably adapted to the necessity of
seizing and swallowing whatever comes along. The gulper, or pelican eel,
has a huge mouth, jaws that open fantastically wide, and a belly that
can contain a fish larger than itself. Some gulpers are about two feet
long but one remarkable species reaches a length of six feet. Most of
its length consists of a long, whiplike tail, with the mouth making up
the rest of the body. The feeding action of the gulpers has been
described as not swallowing their prey, but instead drawing themselves
over it like a snake consuming a mouse. Many deep-sea fishes are
anglers; that is, they are fishes that fish. Most of them bear a long,
flexible appendage dangling from the top of the head. A light organ at
the tip of the rod is dangled provocatively. Any fish that comes closer
to investigate the glowing, wormlike bait is rapidly taken in to the
angler's mouth and swallowed. Most anglers are jet black with enormous
heads and mouths. The mouth is fitted with long, sharp, curved teeth
that effectively trap the prey. Abizarre variation of the angler is the
bottomdwelling, deep-sea fish that has a lighted appendage hanging from
the roof of its mouth. It rests on the bottom, mouth agape, with the
glowing "worm" wiggling in the dark. Any fish that is attracted into the
angler'smawby an apparent bit of live food is quickly swallowed with
little effort on the angler's part.
Sea Monsters Most scientists
discount stories of sea monsters in the sense of serpentine animals
that resemble the mythical dragon. None has ever been seen or examined
by a reputable biologist. There are, however, denizens of the sea that
are monstrous. Except for the whales (which are mammals, not fish), the
three largest fishes are sharks. The megamouth shark (only discovered in
1976) is up to seventeen feet long. The basking shark reaches a length
of forty feet. The giant of all fishes is the whale shark, reaching
lengths of more than fifty feet. All three species are docile and feed
on tiny plankton near the surface at night, but each day descend into
the dark depths. Probably the source of most sea-monster stories is the
giant squid. Related to the six- to eight-inch squid eaten as calimari
or used as fishing bait, the giant squid truly lives up to its name. It
grows to a length of sixty feet, has eyes the size of automobile
hubcaps, and bears eight arms. It feeds on fishes and any other marine
creature it can capture in its natural domain, three thousand feet down.
It frequently is attacked and eaten by sperm whales. The squid is not a
fish, but is a member of the same group of sea organisms that includes
oysters and clams.
No comments:
Post a Comment