Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (2024)

Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (1)

Researchers captured this image of a sea anemone on the ocean floor during a 45-day expedition to the Clarion-Clipperton Zone in the Pacific Ocean.

Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (2)

The pristine ecosystem, 16,400 feet (5,000 meters) below the surface, is a site earmarked for deep-sea mining of critical and rare metals.

Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (3)

A Barbie-pink sea pig saunters along the seafloor. Potato-size polymetallic nodules that are rich in nickel, manganese and cobalt carpet the seabed in the zone.

Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (4)

Some 6,000 to 8,000 species could be waiting to be discovered in the CCZ, according to research. A polynoid is a type of marine worm.

Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (5)

The rattail fish is one of the few vertebrates that can survive at these extreme depths.

Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (6)

The elegantly cup-shaped glass sponge is a particularly long-lived ocean life-form.

Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (7)

The International Seabed Authority, under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, issued 17 exploration contracts within the CCZ to companies and governments.

Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (8)

An abyssal sea anemone, a close relative of jellyfish, makes its home in a reef of nodules containing the metal manganese.

Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (9)

Many deep-sea life-forms are reliant on the polymetallic nodules, which form slowly. Here, a branching bryozoan uses a nodule as a surface on which to grow.

Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (10)

The abyssal plain is thought to have remained virtually unchanged for tens of millions of years.

Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (11)

This bottom-dwelling crustacean is an invertebrate known as a tanaid.

Ocean life in deep-sea mining zone

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Ancient glass sponges. A Barbie-pink sea pig sauntering along the seafloor. A transparent unicumber hovering in the depths.

These wonders are just an initial snapshot of fantastic creatures discovered 16,400 feet (5,000 meters) beneath the surface of the Pacific Ocean in a pristine area that’s earmarked as a site for deep-sea mining of critical and rare metals. The natural resources are in high demand for use in solar panels, electric car batteries and other green technologies, among other uses.

The 45-day expedition to the Clarion-Clipperton Zone, which wrapped March 20, documented biodiversity in the abyssal plain. Using a remotely operated vehicle, the team on board the UK research ship James Cook photographed the deep-sea life and took samples for future study.

Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (12)

A Barbie-pink sea pig saunters along the seafloor.

“We can assume that many of these species will be new to science. Sometimes they have been seen/observed/known before, but not collected or formally described,” said Regen Drennan, a postdoctoral marine biologistat London’s Natural History Museum.

“These specimens will be brought to the NHM London to be identified and studied for years to come.”

The voyage was the second conducted by a UK initiative known as the Seabed Mining and Resilience to Experimental Impact, or SMARTEX, project, involving the Natural History Museum, National Oceanography Centre, British Geological Survey and other institutions.

The US Geological Survey estimates that 21.1 billion dry tons of polymetallic nodules exist in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone — containing more reserves of many critical metals than the world’s land-based reserves combined.

If deep-sea mining follows the same trajectory as offshore oil production, more than one-third of these critical metals will come from deep-ocean mines by 2065, the federal agency estimated.

Scientists believe many of the life-forms that call this environment home would be unlikely to recover from the removal of the nodules and are calling for protections, according to the Natural History Museum.

Weighing biodiversity and industry

In international waters, the Clarion-Clipperton Zone is beyond the jurisdiction of any one country. The International Seabed Authority, under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, has issued 17 exploration contracts. However, several countries, including the United Kingdom and France, have expressed caution, supporting a moratorium or ban on deep-sea mining to safeguard marine ecosystems and conserve biodiversity.

Some 6,000 to 8,000 species could be waiting to be discovered in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone, according to a June 2023 study published in the journal Current Biology.

Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (13)

In extreme ocean depths, there is no sunlight and the temperature is around 35 F (1.5 C), but life-forms such as this glass sponge thrive.

The pink amperima sea cucumber, nicknamed the “Barbie pig,” is one of the largest invertebrates living on the deep-sea floor. Along with the transparent unicumber, the creature is a type of sea pig within the scientific family called Elpidiidae. The Barbie pig grazes upon the small amounts of detritus that descend from surface waters to the seabed and are important in terms of cycling organic matter, explained Drennan, who wasn’t directly involved in the expedition.

“Many species in this family have developed long stout legs that allow them to walk across the seafloor, and elongated mouthparts to pick and choose the detritus they feed on,” Drennan said via email.

The expedition also captured images of elegant, cup-shaped glass sponges, which are thought to have the longest life span of any creature on the planet — up to 15,000 years, although the expedition teamdoesn’t know how old the sponges they photographed are.

Sea anemones, close relatives of jellyfish, “fill the role of large sit-and-wait carnivores on the deep sea floor, catching small swimming animals in their tentacles,” she added.

Many of the life-forms that live in these depths are reliant on the polymetallic nodules, which form ever so gradually through chemical processes that cause metals to precipitate out of water around shell fragments and shark teeth, according to the Natural History Museum.

Researchers estimate that it takes roughly 1 million years for these nodules to grow just tens of millimeters in size. The largest known nodules reach around 8 inches (20 centimeters) across, which suggests that these environments have remained virtually unchanged at the bottom of the ocean for tens of millions of years.

Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (14)

A transparent deep-sea creature called a unicumber.

Critics say that noise could disrupt marine mammals such as whales and dolphins, while plumes of sediment, potentially containing toxic compounds, kicked up by equipment on the seabed may disperse, harming midwater ecosystems, according to recent research.

It’s also possible, these scientists warn, that deep-sea mining could disrupt the way carbon is stored in the ocean, contributing to the climate crisis.

Correction:This story has been updated to reflect that the deep-sea mining zone is 16,400 feet beneath the Pacific Ocean’s surface.

Stunning images of ocean life in proposed deep-sea mining zone | CNN (2024)
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