The oceans far from the coast are extremely desertic places
There's a 'Desert' in The Middle of The Pacific, And We
Finally Know What Lives There
In the centre of the South Pacific, there's a place as far
away from land as anyone on Earth could ever hope to get. The ocean is
different there.
These distant waters lie at the heart of the South
Pacific Gyre, the centre of which holds the “the oceanic pole of
inaccessibility: the ocean's remotest extreme, aka Point Nemo (a name meaning
'no-one'), famous otherwise for being a spacecraft cemetery.
But aside from the ghosts of burnt-up satellites, what
dwells under these far-off waves?
Not much, scientists have long thought. Despite taking up 10
percent of the ocean's surface, the South Pacific Gyre (SPG) – the largest
of Earth’s five giant ocenan-spanning current systems, is generally
considered a 'desert' in terms of marine biology.
Nonetheless, stuff does live there, even if organic life in
these waters (and the seabed below it) is few and far between, due to a range
of factors.
These include distance from land (and the nutrient matter it
provides), the way water swirling currents isolate the centre of the gyre from
the rest of the ocean, and high UV levels in this part of the ocean.
In truth, though, we don't actually know all that much about
the life-forms that inhabit the SPG, largely because of how hard it is to study
this oceanic desert – due to both its extreme remoteness, and also how large it
is, covering about 37 million square kilometres (14 million square miles).
Despite the challenges, a new international research effort
has given us what the scientists claim is an unparalleled glimpse at the microbial
creatures that exist in these waters.
During a six-week expedition aboard the German research
vessel FS Sonnefrom December 2015 to January 2016, a crew led by the Max
Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology sailed a 7,000-kilometre (4,350 miles)
journey through the SPG from Chile to New Zealand.
En route, they sampled the microbial populations of the
remote waters at depths between 20 to 5,000 metres (65 ft to 16,400 ft), using
a newly developed analysis system that enabled the researchers to sequence and
identify organic samples en route in as little as 35 hours.
"To our surprise, we found about a third less cells in
South Pacific surface waters compared to ocean gyres in the
Atlantic", says one of the researchers, microbial ecologist Bernhard
Fuchs.
"It was probably the lowest cell numbers ever measured
in oceanic surface waters."
Among the microbes the team found, 20 major bacterial clades
dominated the lot. These were mostly organisms scientists have encountered in
other gyre systems, such as SAR11, SAR116, SAR86, Prochlorococcus,
and more.
The distribution of these microbe communities depended
largely on water depth, based around factors such as changes in temperature,
nutrient concentrations, and availability of light.
One of the populations identified, called AEGEAN–169, was
particularly numerous in the surface waters of the SPG, whereas previous
research had only discovered them at 500-metre depths.
"This indicates an interesting potential adaptation to
ultraoligotrophic [low in biological productivity] waters and high solar
irradiance", says one of the team, microbiologist Greta Reintjes.
"It is definitely something we will investigate
further."
On the whole though, the sampling generally confirmed that
the SPG is a "unique, ultraoligotrophic habitat", where low nutrient
availability restricts growth to specialist oligotrophic organisms and creatures
that have adapted to "extreme physicochemical conditions".
In other words, the SPG can't shake off its 'desert'
reputation just yet, but there is a bright side to all that organic absence:
these distant, almost lifeless waters are said to be the clearest ocean in all
the world.
Peter Cockrill
Reference: https://www.sciencealert.com/in-the-heart-of-the-ocean-lies-a-desert-and-scientists-just-found-what-lives-in-it

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