The problem: Although scientists have been studying deep-sea animals
since the 1860s, they still don’t know much about them. That’s in large
part because the fish, octopuses and other creatures that thrive at the
bottom of the ocean die quickly at the surface. In some cases, the lower
pressure and higher temperature melt the lipids in their cell
membranes. Even hardier animals, such as crabs, can survive at sea level
for no more than a few weeks.
The solution: The AbyssBox can keep deep-sea fauna alive above sea
level for months, and possibly much longer. Biologists from the Pierre
and Marie Curie University in Paris and the French Research Institute
for Exploitation of the Sea spent three years developing the
1,300-pound, four-gallon tank, which mimics the conditions found near
deep-sea hydrothermal vents. (The actual vents on the ocean floor shoot
hot water that attracts marine life.)
The team set the tank’s water to about 60°F and added a hot jet. A
water pump raises the pressure to 3,000 pounds per square inch.
Three-inch-thick steel walls withstand the pressure. The researchers
feed the tank’s residents using an exchange tube with a pressure lock
and watch them through a strong plastic porthole. Deep-sea-vent crabs
and shrimp originally from the Lucky Strike hydrothermal field on the
Mid-Atlantic Ridge are now living in two separate AbyssBoxes on display
at the Océanopolis aquarium in Brest, France. They have survived since
August.
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