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'The Hoff' Crab is New Ocean Find

'The Hoff' Crab is New Ocean Find 

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  #1  
01-04-2012, 10:12 PM
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'The Hoff' Crab is New Ocean Find

UK scientists have found prodigious numbers of a new crab species on the Southern Ocean floor that they have dubbed "The Hoff" because of its hairy chest.

The animal was discovered living around volcanic vents off South Georgia.

Great piles of the crabs were seen to come together.

The creature has still to be formally classified, hence the humorous nickname that honours the often bare-chested US actor David Hasselhoff.

It is, however, a type of yeti crab, said Professor Alex Rogers who led the research cruise that found the animal, and it will be given a formal scientific name in due course.

Yeti crabs were first identified in the southern Pacific and are recognised for their hairs, or setae, along their claws and limbs that they use to cultivate the bacteria which they then eat.

But the new species found around the vents that populate the East Scotia Ridge are slightly different in that they exhibit long setae on their ventral surface - on their undersides.

"Their nickname on the cruise ship was the 'Hasselhoff crab', which gives you some idea of what they look like," explained Dr Rogers from Oxford University's Department of Zoology.

"The crab occurs in staggering densities. It is just incredible to see these animals literally lying in heaps around the diffuse flow of these vents.

"In places, they reached as many as 600 individuals per square metre."

The Hoff crab is just one of a number of species new to science to come out of the cruise, which also included researchers from the University of Southampton, the National Oceanography Centre and the British Antarctic Survey.

The team reports novel types of starfish, barnacles, sea anemones, and even an octopus - all living some 2,500m down.

The cruise employed the UK deep-diving robotic submersible, Isis, to investigate the slowly spreading ridge near Antarctica.

It is dotted with hydrothermal vents - cracks in the volcanic rock where mineral-rich, hot waters gush from below the seabed to sustain an extraordinary array of organisms.

What surprised the team was not so much what they found, but rather what was absent.

Vent systems in other parts of the world are dominated by animals such as tubeworms, mussels, other types of crab, and shrimps. These were all missing from the East Scotia Ridge.

This is fascinating because the cruise was originally initiated to investigate the hypothesis that the Southern Ocean acted as a gateway between the other major oceans of the world, allowing for the dispersal of vent organisms over geological timescales.

It was thought the Southern Ocean's strong currents might help drive species from one ocean basin to another, and finding a very diverse group of animal types also at East Scotia Ridge would have been a powerful statement in support of this dispersal hypothesis.

The team did see some similarities - such as barnacles that were very similar to Pacific crustaceans, and limpets that looked the same as some Atlantic forms - but nothing like what had been expected.

"We think the very harsh conditions of Antarctic waters, particularly in terms of their extreme seasonality, probably act as a barrier to some of the vent fauna," explained Professor Rogers.

"What we've found is a much more complex situation than we were anticipating, and this has pretty much changed our ideas about how vent organisms are distributed at a global scale."

The results of the cruise are reported in this week's edition of the journal PLoS Biology.


Source = http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-16394430




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The crab occurs in staggering densities - up to 600 individuals per square metre


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An unidentified pale octopus was seen nearly 2,400m down


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Isis has the capability to dive to more than 6km below the ocean surface










QUOTE THAT CAME WITH VIDEO

scientists have found an array of new species living around volcanic vents on the Southern Ocean floor south-east of South Georgia.

The haul includes a new type of yeti crab that researchers dubbed "The Hoff" crab when they first saw it, in honour of the famous American actor David Hasselhoff. The crab has long hairs - setae - on its ventral surface, or abdomen.

This video of the vents on the East Scotia Ridge was captured by the British deep-diving robot submersible, Isis.

This species' distinguishing features are the dense patches of dark hair on its claws. The crab's body is the size of a human palm. The carapace width is 30--100 millimetres (1.2--3.9 in) and the legs are about twice as long as the carapace is wide.
Mitten crabs spend most of their life in fresh water, but they must return to the sea to breed. During their fourth or fifth year in late summer, the crustaceans migrate downstream, and attain sexual maturity in the tidal estuaries. After mating, the females continue seaward, overwintering in deeper waters. They return to brackish water in the spring to hatch their eggs. After development as larvae, the juvenile crabs gradually move upstream into fresh water, thus completing the life cycle.
[edit]Invasive species
This species has been spread to North America and Europe, raising concerns that it competes with local species, and its burrowing nature damages embankments and clogs drainage systems. The crabs can make significant inland migrations. It was reported in the London Evening Standard in 1995 that the residents of Greenwich saw Chinese mitten crabs coming out of the River Thames and moving towards the High Street, and other reports indicate that the crabs have been known to take up residence in swimming pools. In some places the crabs have been found hundreds of miles from the sea. There is concern in areas with a substantial native crab fishery, such as the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland and the Hudson River in New York (both locations where the crabs were first spotted in 2005), as the impact of the invasion by this species on the native population is unknown.
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  #2  
01-04-2012, 10:22 PM
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Re: 'The Hoff' Crab is New Ocean Find

  #3  
01-04-2012, 10:27 PM
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Re: 'The Hoff' Crab is New Ocean Find

trying to find a better picture showing the hairy chest.
n joy so far though, video going up now
  #4  
01-05-2012, 06:12 AM
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Re: 'The Hoff' Crab is New Ocean Find

wonder if they taste good? melted butter and im sure they do.
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01-05-2012, 10:51 AM
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Re: 'The Hoff' Crab is New Ocean Find

wonder if they taste good? melted butter and im sure they do.
Why don't you take a fat shit on them and serve them to someone unsuspecting..?
Cooking With Shit
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01-07-2012, 12:57 AM
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Re: 'The Hoff' Crab is New Ocean Find

They look like Mudcrabs from Fallout and Elder Scrolls games.
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  #7  
01-07-2012, 09:09 PM
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Re: 'The Hoff' Crab is New Ocean Find

Does it have a drinking problem and like cheeseburgers as well?
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01-08-2012, 02:21 PM
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Re: 'The Hoff' Crab is New Ocean Find

so many things to discover down there


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