Nine new species for disappearing handfish family

This is quite amazing as this family of fish used to have just 5 species - suddenly there are 14. It shows how much we have to learn ... read on

Nine new species of handfish have been described by CSIRO in research that highlights an urgent need to better understand and protect the diversity of life in Australia’s oceans.

Handfish are a type of small, often strikingly patterned or colourful fish that tend to ‘walk’ on the seabed on hand-like fins, rather than swim.

Fifty million-years ago, they ‘walked’ the world’s oceans, but now only exist off eastern and southern Australia.

There are only 14 known species of handfish, nine of which were described recently.

These new species are in the same family as the already endangered Spotted Handfish and are described in a review of the handfish family by Daniel Gledhill and Peter Last, Hobart-based fish taxonomists from the CSIRO Wealth from Oceans Flagship.

In this podcast Daniel Gledhill explains why handfishes are extremely vulnerable to environmental change, and how CSIRO is working to better understand the role of Australia as a refuge for this once global fish.

Listen to the CSIRO podcast at

http://www.csiro.au/multimedia/Handfish-walking-to-extinction.html


Contributed by Tim Hochgrebe added 2010-05-25

Login or become a member to join in with this discussion.

directory

AOI AustraliaAOI Australia
AOI underwater photographic products - a professional OEM/ODM underwater camera casings and underwater electronic products manufacturer. Great quality wet lenses for underwater photography.

Articles

Sponges: More Than Just a Bathroom AccessorySponges: More Than Just a Bathroom Accessory
One animal that every diver will have encountered, because they don't hide or swim away and are mostly brightly coloured: the sponge. Sponges are single or colonial animals which body bears many pores. Hence the name of its Phylum: Porifera (Latin porus, 'pore'; ferre, 'to bear').
Underwater Card 2