(Please note: This post does not give an exact answer to the question.)
It is comparable to the amount of stars in the sky. Especially if you think that 95% of the world’s oceans are unexplored.
That is why in 2000 a huge census of what lives in the ocean started. The Census of Marine Life brings together more than 2,000 scientists from 82 countries try to answer the question. Every so often a report card of their progress is unveiled to the public – and the latest one was this month. It is great – they are always finding new wacky stuff.
Currently, there are about 230,000 known marine creatures that have gone through the process of becoming legitimately described as “unique”. Since 2003 the Census of Marine Life has discovered more than 5,000 new living creatures – But, 111 have been processed as new and unique creatures! The scientists are making remarkable progress.
Here is a brief list of some of the new wacky stuff they have found:
- An octopi that lives in the deep-sea – unusual since lacks an ink sack like other octopi – you don’t need to ink in the dark, right?
- Sea stars and sea spiders larger than a bread box.
- A completely blind lobster species with very unique antennae used for feeling.
- A brand new orange and black stripped shrimp that lives off the coast of Africa.
This is a link to the most recent progress report – 24 pages – great pictures!
Click to access coml_highlightsReport08-sm.pdf
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