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Scientists witness stunning, unprecedented carnage in the ocean (biggest fish eating fish sonar detected event) 🐟

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From Mashable:

“The Atlantic cod, a voracious ocean predator. Credit: Witold Siekierzynski / Getty Images

On an unassuming morning off the Norwegian coast, millions of small fish called capelin began to gather in the ocean. Soon enough, they amassed to 23 million individuals, forming a group over 6 miles long.

Nearby predators, Atlantic cod, took notice.

Over just a few hours, marine researchers, using a sonar imaging system, observed a colossal congregation of cod consume over 10 million capelin. It was the largest predation event ever documented in the ocean.

"It’s the first time seeing predator-prey interaction on a huge scale, and it’s a coherent battle of survival," Nicholas Makris, a professor of mechanical and ocean engineering at MIT and one of the study's authors, said in an MIT statement.

This research from the Barents Sea was published in the peer-reviewed science journal Nature Communications Biology. The observations are from February 2014, but new techniques have illuminated the predation event by allowing scientists to clearly differentiate the cod from the capelin.

To our species, the event appears extraordinary or violent. But nature is commonly ruthless. In the dark deep sea, home to sprawling groups of animals, such natural happenings certainly impact a certain population, but don't necessarily spell doom for the greater species, like the capelin. The 2014 fish gathering, called a shoal, makes up just 0.1 percent of capelin in this ocean region.

"In our work we are seeing that natural catastrophic predation events can change the local predator prey balance in a matter of hours," Makris explained. "That’s not an issue for a healthy population with many spatially distributed population centers or ecological hotspots."

Yet, crucially, as marine ecosystems are threatenedand the oceans warm relentlessly, not all populations will always be able to absorb such momentous losses.



"It’s been shown time and again that, when a population is on the verge of collapse, you will have that one last shoal. And when that last big, dense group is gone, there’s a collapse," Makris noted. "So you’ve got to know what’s there before it’s gone, because the pressures are not in their favor."

“ "It’s a coherent battle of survival" ”

Marine researchers couldn't be underwater to observe such an expansive, rapidly evolving predation event. But they used an acoustic instrument attached to the bottom of their vessel to beam sound waves into the water below. These acoustic signals, which are commonly used in ocean exploration and mapping, bounce off objects like fish, revealing what's down there. This specific instrument, called the Ocean Acoustic Waveguide Remote Sensing (OAWRS) system, captured the imagery below.

Importantly, the acoustic signals pinging off each type of fish are distinct, allowing the marine researchers to see both the congregation and predation event.

"Fish have swim bladders that resonate like bells," Makris said. "Cod have large swim bladders that have a low resonance, like a Big Ben bell, whereas capelin have tiny swim bladders that resonate like the highest notes on a piano."

Here's what you're seeing below:

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- Row (i): Both species are seen spread out and randomly moving about the Barents Sea.

- Row (ii): In the early morning, both species create miles-long dense shoals.

- Row (iii): On left (a) is the surviving prey capelin; on right is the "vast engulfing cod shoal," the researchers wrote.



The acoustic maps show quickly forming and evolving shoals of both capelin and Atlantic cod.Credit: Courtesy of the researchers / MIT



Two capelin fish. A fish is about the size of an anchovy:

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Scientists estimate that the larger cod rapidly consumed over half of this giant capelin shoal, numbered at 23 million. Why might the capelin have formed such a massive, conspicuous group? Biologists suggest it allows the migrating animals to save energy as they cruise on the motion created by millions of traveling fish.

And in doing so, they attracted some 2.5 million



Atlantic cod — a species commonly eaten by humans. :

IMG_2579.jpeg






Such happenings below the surface are often unseen to us, but with these modern expeditions, it's growing evermore clear that Earth's seas are profoundly biodiverse and active.”



Link: https://mashable.com/article/ocean-fish-millions-killed-predation-record


 
Very interesting👍 thanks
Yea I wish there was film of it. A seafood slaughter, a fishcide. Such is nature.

If this is what passes for news for you, you need to broaden your horizons.
It was on the “google feed” on my phone and I know I’m not the only one who likes biology and nature. You are a hippo you should understand this.

Pretty cool. They can plan, invent, and perfect all they like but if mother nature finally decides she's had enough of us there's nothing to be done.
Indeed. Even if we destroy ourselves that would be Mother Nature doing it. Because we are a natural and primate species and nature gave us the brains and hands that would be used to build and operate whatever technology destroys us.
 
Yea I wish there was film of it. A seafood slaughter, a fishcide. Such is nature.


It was on the “google feed” on my phone and I know I’m not the only one who likes biology and nature. You are a hippo you should understand this.


Indeed. Even if we destroy ourselves that would be Mother Nature doing it. Because we are a natural and primate species and nature gave us the brains and hands that would be used to build and operate whatever technology destroys us.
Hippos are most obnoxious under water...


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Hippos are most obnoxious under water...


View attachment 853676
Wow that’s really cool actually!

Fuck. Now I just want a pound of deep fried Smelts. Butterflied please. Lemon and Tabasco on the side?
Are smelts fish? Like small ones like anchovies?
 
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