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JC036 Blog 7

Above: For those who want to know where we are!

 

Hi All

Its been a busy 36 hours so sorry for the lack of an updated. We have been continuing ROV operations in conjunction with the elevators and their experiments. We have collected lots and lots of interesting samples and have completed our first set of experiments.

I've become aware how many people are looking at the website and I have to say a big hello to Dave Billet from the girls onboard. They have said you are an avid follower of the blog and are a "Virtual" member of the science team onboard. I promise we will try and get you more pictures of Holothurians.

For those at home a bit of information on Holothurians:

Information on Holothurians from www.wikipedia.org

Holothuroidea

Holothuroidea are a class of marine animals (phylum Echinodermata) with an elongated body and leathery skin, which is found on the sea floor worldwide. Many holothurian species and genera, informally known as sea cucumbers, are targeted for human consumption. The harvested product is also known as trepang, bêche-de-mer, balate, or sea slug.

The body contains a single, branched gonad. Like all echinoderms, sea cucumbers have an endoskeleton just below the skin, calcified structures that are usually reduced to isolated microscopic ossicles (or sclerietes) joined by connective tissue. These can sometimes be enlarged to flattened plates, forming an armour. In pelagic species such as Pelagothuria natatrix (Order Elasipodida, family Pelagothuriidae), the skeleton and a calcareous ring are absent.


Overview

Sea cucumber in Mahé, Seychelles ejects sticky filaments from the anus in self-defence.Holothuroidea are generally scavengers, feeding on debris in the benthic zone of the ocean. Exceptions include pelagic cucumbers and the species Rynkatropa pawsoni, which has a commensal relationship with deep-sea anglerfish. The diet of most cucumbers consists of plankton and decaying organic matter found in the sea. Some sea cucumbers position themselves in currents and catch food that flows by with their open tentacles. They also sift through the bottom sediments using their tentacles. Sea cucumbers communicate with each other through sending hormone signals through the water which others pick up.

A remarkable feature of these animals is the catch collagen that forms their body wall. This can be loosened and tightened at will, and if the animal wants to squeeze through a small gap, it can essentially liquefy its body and pour into the space. To keep itself safe in these crevices and cracks, the sea cucumber hooks up all its collagen fibres to make its body firm again.

Some species of coral-reef sea cucumbers within the order Aspidochirotida can defend themselves by expelling their sticky cuvierian tubules (enlargements of the respiratory tree that float freely in the coelom) to entangle potential predators. When startled, these cucumbers may expel some of them through a tear in the wall of the cloaca in an autotomic process known as evisceration. Replacement tubules grow back in one-and-a-half to five weeks, depending on the species. The release of these tubules can also be accompanied by the discharge of a toxic chemical known as holothurin, which has similar properties to soap. This chemical can kill any animal in the vicinity and is one more way in which these sedentary animals can defend themselves.

They can be found in great numbers on the deep sea floor, where they often make up the majority of the animal biomass. At depths deeper than 5.5 mi (8.8 km), sea cucumbers comprise 90% of the total mass of the macrofauna..Sea Cucumbers form large herds that move across the bathygraphic features of the ocean, hunting food. The body of some deep water holothurians is made of a tough gelatinous tissue with unique properties that makes the animals able to control their own buoyancy, making it possible for them to either live on the ocean floor or to float over it to move to new locations with a minimum of energy, for instance Enypniastes eximia, Peniagone leander and Paelopatides confundens.

In more shallow waters, sea cucumbers can form dense populations. The strawberry sea cucumber (Squamocnus brevidentis) of New Zealand lives on rocky walls around the southern coast of the South Island where populations sometimes reach densities of 1,000 animals per square metre. For this reason, one such area in Fiordland is simply called the strawberry fields.

Sea cucumbers extract oxygen from water in a pair of 'respiratory trees' that branch off the cloaca just inside the anus, so that they 'breathe' by drawing water in through the anus and then expelling it. A variety of fish, most commonly pearl fish, have evolved a commensalistic symbiotic relationship with sea cucumbers in which the pearl fish will live in sea cucumber's cloaca using it for protection from predation, a source of food (the nutrients passing in and out of the anus from the water), and to develop into their adult stage of life.


Emperor shrimp Periclimenes imperator on a Bohadschia argus sea cucumberMany polychaete worms and crabs have also specialized to use the cloacal respiratory trees for protection by living inside the sea cucumber.

Ten percent of the blood cell pigment of the sea cucumber is vanadium. Just as the horseshoe crab has blue blood rather than red blood (colored by iron in hemoglobin) because of copper in the hemocyanin pigment, the blood of the sea cucumber is yellow because of the vanadium in the vanabin pigment. Nonetheless, there is no evidence that vanabins carry oxygen, in contrast to hemoglobin and hemocyanin.

Most sea cucumbers reproduce by releasing sperm and ova into the ocean water. Depending on conditions, one organism can produce thousands of gametes. An unusual sea cucumber found off the South African coast, the red-chested sea cucumber (Pseudocnella insolens), fertilises its eggs internally and then picks up the fertilised egg with one of its feeding tentacles. The egg is then inserted into a pouch on the adult's body, where it develops and eventually hatches from the pouch as a juvenile sea cucumber.

The largest American species is Holothuria floridana, which abounds just below low-water mark on the Florida reefs.

Visitors to Guam often encounter the local variation, called balate, which litters the sea floor all around the island, including in water as shallow as 3 feet. These jet black sea cucumbers are normally 10-12 inches long, 1.5-2.0 inches in diameter and are often curled up, partially covered with sand from the sea floor.

The most common way to separate the subclasses is by looking at their oral tentacles. Subclass Dendrochirotacea has 8-30 oral tentacles, subclass Aspidochirotacea has 10-30 leaflike or shieldlike oral tentacles, while subclass Apodacea may have up to 25 simple or pinnate oral tentacles and is also characterized by reduced or absent tube feet, as in the order Apodida.

Holothurians as food and medicine

"To supply the markets of Southern China, Macassan trepangers traded with the Indigenous Australians of Arnhem Land. This Macassan contact with Australia is the first recorded example of trade between the inhabitants of the Australian continent and their Asian neighbours."

Some varieties of sea cucumber (known as gamat in Malaysia or teripang in Indonesia) are said to have excellent healing properties. There are pharmaceutical companies being built based on this gamat product. Extracts are prepared and made into oil, cream, or cosmetics. Some products are intended to be taken internally. The effectiveness of sea cucumber extract in tissue repair has been the subject of serious study. It is believed that the sea cucumber contains all the fatty acids necessary to play an active role in tissue repair.

Commercial harvest
In recent years the sea cucumber industry in Alaska has gained strength due to increased export of the skins and muscles to China.

In China, many commercial sea cucumbers are farmed in artificial ponds. These ponds can be as large as 1,000 acres, and satisfy much of the local demand. Wild sea cucumbers are caught by divers and these wild Alaskan sea cucumbers have higher nutritional value and are larger than farmed Chinese sea cucumbers. Larger size and higher nutritional value has allowed the Alaskan fisheries to continue to compete for market shares, despite the increase in local, Chinese sea cucumber farming.

So ISIS completed two more dives 103 ands 104 both at roughly 3600m -(11,800ft, 2.23 miles)

I have had some questions about various aspects of what we are doing. If you have any questions feel free to email me questions@rrsjamescook.com and I will try and help you as best as I can. One of the questions I have been asked is "How do we deploy Isis?" - I will answer this in the coming day with a good selection of pictures to make it easier for you to understand!

We have also deployed a device known as a bathysnap. Bathysnap is a unique free-fall camera and current meter system which can operate on the deep sea floor for periods of over 1 year. It repeatedly photographs 2m2 of the sea bed at a preset frame interval and records the current speed and direction and ambient temperature 1m above the sea bed. Bathysnap has been developed over the past ten years and is now a highly successful instrument.

Time lapse photography can provide important information in the studies of deep sea benthic biology and material flux to the sea bed. Bathysnap has been used by NOC to study changes in the appearance of the sea bed with time, the feeding behaviour of larger animals, and their effects on benthic environment.

It was thought that the ocean floor was not subject to the seasonal coverings of detritus often observed in shallow inshore environments. However, Bathysnap results have shown that dying phytoplankton can sink very rapidly to create a substantial layer of detritus at depths greater than 4000m.

Bathysnap comprises a frame to support a scientific time lapse camera, current meter, compass and buoyancy spheres. The structure also carries an acoustic command release system, a xenon flash light and a marker flag. A 10m polypropylene line with a 25cm float facilitates retrieval at the surface

The elevators were recovered. unfortunately one of the experiments became dislodged during recovery and fell back into the abyss and was lost. The other elevator contained a selection of holothurians kept in small chambers that contain lots of sensors to study a whole range of different things about the beasties.

Another experiment was aimed at collecting holothurians poo - but enough said about that!

Above: Bathysnap is recovered

Above: Bathysnap being recovered

Above: Bathysnap being brought onboard

Events have conspired against us and at present we are unable to do any coring work. So the ROV will probably be doing the brunt of scientific work in the next few days.

The weather has been on the change and last night (Saturday) - science was postponed as the weather cranked up and the ship started to roll a bit too much for ROV operations. That also meant we had a night off and everyone ate together and had s few drinks in the evening.

Above: A satellite image from our Dartcom system showing a nice big whirl coming towards the James Cook. We are the yellow writing on the right-hand edge of the image.

The girls (and Colin) have been examining the piston cores that we did a few days ago and have been looking at the different layers of sediments. Once they completed this the cores are boxed up and sent to BOSCORF (BRITISH OCEAN SEDIMENT CORE RESEARCH FACILITY) which has a trully massive collection of cores store in fridges to preserve them.

Above: Colin looking at one of the cores

Above: Colin and Jess examining a core

Above: Jess playing up!

Above: ISIS being deployed

Above: ISIS preparing to dive with her floats out behind her - more about this tommorow

Above: Dave at ISIS's controls

Above: ISIS powering through the waves

Above: ISIS on the surface

Above: ISIS powering on the surface

Above: ISIS being recovered - the suction sampler dangling by her side

Above: ISIS coming inboard

Above: ISIS coming inboard

Above: Dave attempts to get the elevator - you can see the weathers changing

Above: The lander is craned onboard

Above: The lander is brought inboard

Above: ISIS waiting patiently to be deployed

Above: A shot for Dave!

Above: libby with a holo

Above: Libby opening the experiments to get the holo's out

Above: Libby with one of the holo's from the experiments

Above: libby and a holo

Above: A Holothurian

Above: A Holothurian

 

 

 

 

 
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