WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP)
-- Scientists who conducted the most comprehensive survey to date of New
Zealand's Antarctic waters were surprised by the size of some specimens
found, including jellyfish with 12-foot tentacles and 2-foot-wide
starfish.
National Institute
of Water and Atmospheric Research hold giant Macroptychaster sea stars.
A 2,000-mile journey through the Ross Sea that ended
Thursday has also potentially turned up several new species, including as
many as eight new molluscs.
It's "exciting when you come across a new species,"
said Chris Jones, a fisheries scientist at the U.S. National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration. "All the fish people go nuts about that -- but
you have to take it with a grain of salt."
The finds must still be reviewed by experts to
determine if they are in fact new, said Stu Hanchet, a fisheries scientist
at New Zealand's National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research.
But beyond the discovery of new species, scientists
said the survey, the most comprehensive to date in the Ross Sea, turned up
other surprises.
Hanchet singled out the discovery of "fields" of sea
lilies that stretched for hundreds of yards across the ocean floor.
"Some of these big meadows of sea lilies I don't think
anybody has seen before," Hanchet said.
Previously only small-scale scientific samplings have
been staged in the Ross Sea.
The survey was part of the International Polar Year
program involving 23 countries in 11 voyages to survey marine life and
habitats around Antarctica. The program hopes to set
benchmarks for determining the effects of global warming on Antarctica,
researchers said.
Large sea spiders, jellyfish with 12-foot tentacles,
huge sea snails and starfish the size of big food platters were found
during a 50-day voyage, marine scientist Don Robertson said.
Cold temperatures, a small number of predators, high
levels of oxygen in the sea water and even longevity could explain the
size of some specimens, said Robertson, a scientist with NIWA.
Robertson added that of the 30,000 specimens
collected, hundreds might turn out to be new species.
Stefano Schiaparelli, a mollusk specialist at Italy's
National Antarctic Museum in Genoa, said he thought the find would yield
at least eight new mollusks.
"This is a new brick in the wall of Antarctic
knowledge," Schiaparelli said.