In the twilight zone of the ocean, a fish that could feed the world - or destroy it

In 1789, explorers Alessandro Malaspina and José de Bustamante set out from Cadiz on the first Spanish scientific expedition around the world. For five years, Malaspina and Bustamante studied and collected animals and plants throughout the Spanish Empire, which stretched along the northern, central, and southern Pacific coasts, and westward to the Philippines. /p>

In 2010, another Spanish expedition set out from Cadiz, retracing much of the original route and studying what the oceans look like today.

< p class="dcr-1vtk2mf">The team measured pollutants, plastics and chemicals that weren't around in the days of Malaspina and Bustamante. They collected seawater and plankton samples. And throughout the 31,000 mile voyage, the ship's sonar was turned on, listening for echoes from below. Their main targets? Small, silvery fish that look like sardines or anchovies - only with larger eyes and rows of glow-in-the-dark spots.

A school of lanternfish.

These are lanternfish: there are about 250 species of them and they are not just the most popular fish. common from the twilight zone oceans but the most abundant vertebrates on the planet. Enormous numbers were first noticed during World War II, when naval sonar operators saw echoes from what appeared to be a solid seabed, rising to the surface at night and falling again at dawn. In fact, the sonic pulses echoed in the swimbladders - the internal gas-filled bubbles - of billions of lanternfish, as they gathered in dense layers hiding in the depths, then at sunset swam on thousands of meters to feed on the surface. . Every night, with other animals,...

In the twilight zone of the ocean, a fish that could feed the world - or destroy it

In 1789, explorers Alessandro Malaspina and José de Bustamante set out from Cadiz on the first Spanish scientific expedition around the world. For five years, Malaspina and Bustamante studied and collected animals and plants throughout the Spanish Empire, which stretched along the northern, central, and southern Pacific coasts, and westward to the Philippines. /p>

In 2010, another Spanish expedition set out from Cadiz, retracing much of the original route and studying what the oceans look like today.

< p class="dcr-1vtk2mf">The team measured pollutants, plastics and chemicals that weren't around in the days of Malaspina and Bustamante. They collected seawater and plankton samples. And throughout the 31,000 mile voyage, the ship's sonar was turned on, listening for echoes from below. Their main targets? Small, silvery fish that look like sardines or anchovies - only with larger eyes and rows of glow-in-the-dark spots.

A school of lanternfish.

These are lanternfish: there are about 250 species of them and they are not just the most popular fish. common from the twilight zone oceans but the most abundant vertebrates on the planet. Enormous numbers were first noticed during World War II, when naval sonar operators saw echoes from what appeared to be a solid seabed, rising to the surface at night and falling again at dawn. In fact, the sonic pulses echoed in the swimbladders - the internal gas-filled bubbles - of billions of lanternfish, as they gathered in dense layers hiding in the depths, then at sunset swam on thousands of meters to feed on the surface. . Every night, with other animals,...

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