Discovered in the deep: is this the world ’s longest animal?

A submersible off the coast of Western Australia chanced upon an 45-metre-long deep-sea siphonophore arranged in a feeding spiral, trailing its deadly tentaclesIn 2020, about 600 metres (2,000ft) down in an underwater canyon off the coast of Western Australia, scientists encountered along gelatinous creature suspended in a giant spiral. “It was like a rope on the horizon. You couldn’t miss it,” says Nerida Wilson from the Western Australian Museum. “It was so huge.”It was a deep-sea siphonophore, a relative of the portuguese man o ’ war, or blue bottles, that bob like party balloons on the sea surface, trailing deadly tentacles through the water. This one was probably a new species from the genusApolemia, a group that generally look like tangled feather boas.Continue reading...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - Category: Science Authors: Tags: Marine life Oceans Environment Wildlife Australia news Zoology Biology Science Source Type: news