Monday, April 27, 2009

Food Art

Below are several examples of "food art" taken from this gallery:









Friday, April 17, 2009

Newly Discovered Iron-breathing Microbes



Researchers have reported that a reservoir of briny liquid buried deep beneath an Antarctic glacier supports microbes that have lived in isolation for millions of years. It's a bit like finding a forest that nobody has seen for 1.5 million years.

The discovery of life was in a place where cold, darkness, and lack of oxygen would previously have led scientists to believe nothing could survive.

Despite their profound isolation, the microbes are remarkably similar to species found in modern marine environments, suggesting that the organisms now under the glacier are the remnants of a larger population that once occupied an open fjord or sea.

Chemical analysis from the inaccessible subglacial pool suggests that its inhabitants have lived by breathing iron leached from bedrock with the help of a sulfur catalyst. Lacking any light to support photosynthesis, the microbes have presumably survived by feeding on the organic matter trapped with them when the massive Taylor Glacier sealed off their habitat an estimated 1.5 to 2 million years ago.

The samples were taken at Antarctica's Blood Falls, a frozen waterfall-like feature at the edge of the Taylor Glacier whose striking red appearance first drew early explorers' attention in 1911. Scientists have determined that the coloration is due to rust, which the new research shows was likely liberated from subglacial bedrock by microorganisms.

Original article here.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Vast Black Coral Forest Found



The narrow stretch of water known as the Strait of Messina hides the world's largest forest of black coral, according to a new survey of the Mediterranean sea bed.

Using an underwater robot, marine biologists found almost 30,000 colonies of Antipathella subpinnata coral at a depth of between 180 and 328 feet.

The coral was found near the town of Scilla, off the coast Calabria in southern Italy.

Images taken by the robot showed a seascape completely dominated by spectacular tree-like colonies of black coral, some more than 3 feet high. This is the first time these rare species have been observed in their natural habitat.

A living organism that grows like a plant in deep sea waters, black coral derives its scientific name from the Greek words "anti," for against, and "pathos," for disease. Indeed, black coral amulets were once believed to protect against diseases and evil spirits.

The most highly sought after of all coral species for their use in jewelry, all black corals are listed in the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), which records species at risk of extinction if trade is not controlled.

Original article here.

Friday, April 03, 2009

Extinct Animals Photographed Alive

Below are several examples from this list of 11 extinct animals that have been photographed alive.

Tasmanian Tigers:



Quagga:



Bubal Hartebeest:



Baiji River Dolphin:



Original article here.

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

Crab Riding Jellyfish

Below is a video of a crab hitching a ride on a jellyfish. Small juveniles of this species -- called Graceful Rock Crabs -- are often seen riding jellyfish. The crabs steal food from the jellyfish and also clean off parasitic amphipods.