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Bounty of new species found in oceans

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only
by Staff Writers
London (UPI) Oct 3, 2010
The oceans hold far more biodiversity than imagined, with as many as a million species, a global network of scientists says in London.

The first Census of Marine Life, which is being published Monday, says almost 250,000 marine species have now been identified, and there may be at least another 750,000 waiting to be discovered, The Sunday Telegraph reported.

More than 2,700 scientists from around the world helped carry out the census in more than 540 expeditions over 10 years. They identified more than 6,000 new species.

The discoveries include a blind lobster with a long, spiny, pincer, which lives 330 yards below the surface in the Philippine Sea, and wriggly creatures nicknamed "squidworms."

British scientists have made many finds in the frigid seas around Antarctica, where marine life grows larger than anywhere else in the world, the report said.

Sea spiders, which rarely grow bigger than a fingernail in British waters, are up to 9 inches across in polar seas.

Huge communities of different species have been found on the cold, lightless ocean floor, living at the mouths of thermal vents and rifts that seep nutrients into the ocean, the report said.



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WATER WORLD
Dolphins escape as nets are cut during Japan's annual hunt
Tokyo (AFP) Sept 29, 2010
Japanese police have launched a probe after nets on holding pens for dolphins in the coastal town of Taiji were cut during an annual hunt, possibly by foreign activists, a press report said Wednesday. They are looking into whether the incident is connected with a statement posted on the website of Black Fish, a European conservation organisation, Kyodo news agency quoted investigators as say ... read more







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