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Documented at Depths of 8,178 m in Mariana Trench

A snailfish* was filmed in the Mariana Trench at depths of 8,178 m, exceeding the past record of 8,152 m by 26 m. The depth was determined by conductivity, temperature and pressure (CTD) sensor installed on a lander. This research cruise was carried out in collaboration with the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC) and the Japan Broadcasting Corporation (NHK) in May 2017.

Video footage of the deepest recorded fish will be presented at a special exhibition — DEEP OCEAN — at the National Museum of Nature and Science in Tokyo from August 28, 2017

During a research cruise by JAMSTEC’s research vessel Kairei, a newly designed compact hadal-lander with 4K video cameras installed was placed at depths of 7,498 m and 8,178 m in the Mariana Trench. To attract deep-sea organisms, mackerel was placed in front of the lander frame。At both depths, many dark-colored stones were distributed on the muddy sea floor. At both sites, the first organisms that appeared were amphipods. They fed on the mackerel and consumed them in a few hours. At 7,498 m, a species of snailfish first appeared 3 hours and 37 minutes after the lander was placed on the sea floor. Throughout the period of observation, the snailfish population increased. A giant amphipod was also observed on the video recorded at this depth.

At 8,178 m, a swimming snailfish was captured on the video. It appeared 17 hours and 37 minutes after lander placement. Based on its shape, this snailfish seems to be the same species observed at the 7,498 m site. The snailfish was seen again after its first appearance, though the population did not increase.

Deep-sea organisms and their ecosystems have attracted great scientific interest; however, extremely high pressure in deep-sea trenches has prevented sampling as well as video recordings. The research team will continue investigations of hadal organisms, attempting to collect samples for analyses to better understand the population density of the organisms and the food chain at water depths below 8,000 m.

* In 2014, two species of snailfish, the ‘Mariana snailfish’ (6,198–8,076 m) and the ‘Ethereal snailfish’ (7,939–8,145 m) were discovered in the Mariana Trench by the U.K and U.S study group. The snailfish found during this cruise is considered to be a type of the ‘Mariana snailfish’.

Figure 1A. Bathymetric map of the Mariana Trench.

Figure 1B: Detailed map from red square in Fig. 1A. Two lander deployment sites are shown as blue stars,

Figure 2. Compact hadal-lander, all parts used are designed to be used below 10,000 m

A: Front view, (1) Flasher; (2) Syntactic form; (3) Acoustic transducer; (4) Emergency timer for weight release; (5) Glass sphere and its plastic cover; (6) LED illuminations; (7) 4K cameras; (9) Weight release device; (10) mackerel bait; and (11) Weight

B: Rear view, (12) CTD sensor

Figure 3. Organisms recorded at 7,498 m

A: First, amphipods appeared around the mackerels. Then, snailfish appeared.

Figure 4. Deepest fish recorded at 8,178 m

B: Snailfish resting on the sea floor.

Deepest Fish Ever Recorded — Documented at Depths of 8,178 m in Mariana Trench

DistortoiseLP on August 25th, 2017 at 05:35 UTC »

I would have figured the light from the submersible would bother them more than it seems to. I mean those LEDs to a creature that's never seen anything brighter than bioluminescence must be the equivalent of dropping the sun on your front yard.

TooBigForHats on August 25th, 2017 at 04:20 UTC »

They look less like we think of a fish, and more like really large tadpoles. Cool looking little creatures though, I wonder if that’s the first time they’ve ever seen “light”.

IAMATruckerAMA on August 25th, 2017 at 03:22 UTC »

Imagine just living off corpses that fall from the sky...