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Absorbent and yellow and … mobile? Sea sponges on the move in Arctic Ocean


Absorbent and yellow and … mobile? Sea sponges on the move in Arctic Ocean
A new study suggests that sea sponges are moving across the seafloor of the Arctic Ocean, which challenges the idea that these creatures are primarily immobile.
Previous research has shown that sponges can make limited movements in a laboratory setting, but this is the first time sea sponge trails have been observed in the ocean and attributed to sponge movement.
The researchers hypothesize that the sponges are moving to find food or disperse juveniles, although further research is needed before conclusions can be drawn.
Sea sponges don’t move. At least, that’s what a lot of people used to think about these aquatic invertebrates. But a new study has upended this assumption, and pushed and prodded scientific thought into a new direction. ....

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How One Group of Scientists Managed to Film a Live Kraken — Twice!


If you’re here for bitcoin advice on the Kraken exchange, you’re come to the wrong place … but stay anyway because this is about something more elusive that the secrets of bitcoin riches – a new study reveals how a group of marine biologists managed to twice capture footage of live Krakens, the giant squids that created the myths of the monsters that ate Norse ships. Before you run out to buy an underwater camera and book a diving trip to Greenland, you may want to find out why it’s so difficult.
“Knowledge of the behaviour, distribution, and abundance of these species is therefore a key component to understanding deep-sea ecosystems.” ....

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