For More Information

Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary

NOAA’s Deep-sea Coral Research and Technology Program

NOAA Research Vessel Fulmar

National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science

U.S. Geological Survey

Marine Applied Research and Exploration

California Academy of Sciences

The Hidden World of Seamounts (audio podcast)

Gulf of the Farallones video fly-through (video podcast)

NOAA, Partners Discover Deep Sea Coral and Sponge Banks in Farallones Sanctuary

November 1, 2012
  • Red bubblegum coral (<em>Paragorgiidae</em>) and rockfish, Farallon  Escarpment

    Red bubblegum coral (Paragorgiidae) and rockfish, Farallon Escarpment, -424 meters depth and 6.2° Celsius. Download

  • green spotted rockfish on yellow sponge.

    A green spotted rockfish on yellow sponge. Download image

  • Yellowtail rockfish over boot sponges on Rittenburg Bank. Download image

  • ROV manipulator arm  collecting a sponge

    ROV manipulator arm collecting a sponge on Rittenburg Bank; background: yellowtail rockfish, sponges, anemones, Stylaster corals. Download image

  • Black coral with a rosy rockfish

    Black coral (Antipathes species) with a rosy rockfish in it on "Cochrane Bank," -95 meters depth, 9.5° Celsius. This coral is two meters across and suspected to be at least 100 years old.  The coral had many crabs and juvenile fish living in it. The stems/skeletons of black corals are black, but the living tissue is usually orange or white. Download image

Newly discovered habitats in NOAA’s Gulf of the Farallones Sanctuary have become a underwater melting pot for deep sea corals, sponges, rockfish and other species.

A partnership of federal and independent scientists found the rocky reef habitats in October in an area with depths reaching 457 meters, where such corals and sponges had not been seen before.

Preliminary findings from a recently completed series of research cruises featuring scientists from the sanctuary, NOAA’s National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science, the U.S. Geological Survey, California Academy of Sciences, and Marine Applied Research and Exploration (MARE) include the discovery of many species of sponges and corals including a large black coral on a previously unstudied rocky seafloor bank 40 miles offshore, near the Farallon Islands.

The expeditions explored and photographed the Farallon Escarpment, which is the continental slope within Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary, and two rocky-reef sites: Rittenburg Bank and a previously uncharted seafloor feature, nicknamed Cochrane Bank by the science team.

At least 20 species of sponges and corals were observed during the research cruise. A black coral colony on Cochrane Bank, estimated to be at least 100 years old, was the first such sighting within the sanctuary. Scientists believe the coral may be a species recently discovered in southern California.

Working aboard the NOAA Research Vessel Fulmar, the scientific team deployed a remotely operated vehicle owned and operated by MARE to observe, photograph and sample deep-sea corals, sponges, and associated marine life between 76 meters and 457 meters deep. The expedition is part of a coordinated three-year research effort under NOAA’s Deep-sea Coral Research and Technology Program to better understand the location, distribution, status and health of deep-sea coral and sponge ecosystems along the West Coast in order to inform conservation and management actions.

Potential threats to the health of deep-sea sponge and coral include human-induced disturbances such as oil spills, fishing activities, natural physical disturbance, climate change and ocean acidification.

 

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