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Would a Hagfish By Any Other Name Smell as Sweet?A new species, Epatretus strickrotti, is named for the Alvin pilot who captured it |
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| Enlarge ImageA dorsal view of the captured hagfish Eptatretus strickrotti, a new species of hagfish captured and named after Alvin pilot Bruce Strickrott. (Illustration by Karen Jacobsen, In Situ Science Illustration. Figure 1 from Moller, P.R., and W. J. Jones. 2007. Biol. Bull. 212: 40-54. Reproduced with permission from MBL, Woods Hole, Mass.) |
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| Enlarge ImageThe lone specimen of Eptatretus strickrotti has been preserved and stored in the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco. (Figure 1 from Moller, P.R., and W. J. Jones. 2007. Biol. Bull. 212: 40-54. Reproduced with permission from MBL, Woods Hole, Mass.) |
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| Enlarge ImageAlvin pilot Bruce Strickrott, who captured the first specimen of a new species of hagfish now named after him. (Courtesy of NOAA Ocean Explorer) |
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| Enlarge ImageBruce Strickrott has piloted more than 200 dives on the WHOI-operated submersible Alvin. (Photo by Mark Spear, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution) |
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It’s not hard to figure out how hagfish got their name, since they
aren’t exactly warm and fuzzy. Slithery, skinny, coated in gooey slime,
and often found wriggling and eating in the guts of dead whales, most
people probably don’t want to be associated with them. When Alvin
pilot Bruce Strickrott captured a specimen of the worm-like fish during
a dive in the cold, inky Pacific depths in March 2005, he recalled
thinking it was “cool ... but in a hideous sort of way.”
About a year later, he learned scientists wanted to name it for him. It
turns out that the fish he spotted swimming at a depth of 7, 218 feet (2,200 meters)
during an oceanographic expedition south of Easter Island was the
first hagfish captured from a hydrothermal vent site. Morphological
studies and genetic analyses confirmed what researchers had then
suspected: The hagfish was a new species, and one of the
deepest-dwelling of its kind.
Suddenly, Strickrott felt not repulsed but nearly paternal about the 18-inch (45-centimeter) fish he withdrew from the depths.
“It’s a feather in my cap,” Strickrott said of the announcement of his namesake hagfish, Eptatretus strickrotti. “It’s recognition from researchers for my contributions to the advancement of science.”
An article announcing the new species, by Peter Møller of the
Zoological Museum of the University of Copenhagen and W. Joe Jones of
the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI), was published in
the February 2007 issue of the science journal Biological Bulletin.
What's in a name?
The naming initiates Strickrott into a unique fraternity of least a half-dozen pilots of the deep-sea submersible Alvin
whose surnames are now intertwined with species of jellyfish, worms,
nematodes, and slugs. Like explorers who name rivers and mountains for
their dedicated guides, grateful biologists occasionally christen newly
discovered species for the pilots who have safely and skillfully
navigated them around ocean depths.
The 2-inch (5-centimeter) -long ctenophore Bathocyroe fosteri was named for Alvin
pilot Dudley Foster, who collected the first specimens in 1978 from the
Atlantic Ocean. Paul Tibbetts, the pilot who in 1988 captured a new
type of mussel in the Pacific, was acknowledged when biologists named
the shelled mollusk Punctabyssia tibbettsi.
“Without Alvin pilots, many
oceanographers could not get their jobs done, and we want to recognize
the commitment of these dedicated people,” said Jones, a genetics
specialist at MBARI who
was in Alvin with Strickrott during the hagfish’s capture.
“We saw this little thing swimming like a worm and I told Bruce, ‘There
is no way you are going to catch it,’ ” Jones said. Strickrottwho has
logged more than 1,600 hours and 200 dives in Alvin since becoming a pilot 10 years agoaccepted the
challenge. Within moments, he maneuvered the 23-foot-long submersible
behind the wiggling fish and then vacuumed it into a canister mounted
on the sub through a 0.2-inch (0.5-centimeter) -wide tube known as the “slurp gun.”
“I was like, ‘Man, this guy has skills and deserves recognition,’ ” Jones said. “The naming was a way to express our gratitude.”
Denizens of the deep
The hagfish was one of several unexpected finds during the March 2005
expedition, led by MBARI scientist Bob Vrijenhoek, to learn how
seafloor-dwelling animals from one hydrothermal vent colonize other
vents hundreds or thousands of miles away. The day before, Alvin
pilot Anthony Tarantino had captured a 6-inch (15-centimeter), shaggy
white creature scientists identified as a new family of deep-sea crab.
(See "Lurking Benignly on the Seafloor, the 'Yeti' Crab is Discovered.")
It was Alvin’s first trip that far south in the Pacific in its
40-year career, said Rick Chandler, a submersible operations
coordinator with the Alvin group at WHOIwhich might help explain why both the crab and hagfish had not been identified before.
Nearly two years after its capture, scientists are still determining basic information about Eptatretus strickrottiincluding
its gender, how it can physically survive at such extreme depths, and
what it eats. Unlike most hagfish, found feeding on rotting tissue of
sunken, dead animals like whales, this hagfish was found swimming
alone, about 3 feet (1 meter) above freshly expelled seafloor basalt.
Its body is preserved and stored in a hagfish library of sorts at the
California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco. Jones said scientists
have no immediate plans to return to the Pacific to collect more
hagfish, but the find “reminds us that the oceans remain wide open for
exploration and new discovery.”
Strickrott, meanwhile, has taken good-natured ribbing about his
namesake fish from “individuals who argue that the characteristics of a
hagfish seem to match the persona of some Alvin pilots.”
“Slimy bottom dweller,” he deadpanned. “How fitting.”
Amy E. Nevala
The 2005 Easter Microplate Cruise was supported by the National Science Foundation.
Posted: February 16, 2007 [top] |
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