by | Apr 26, 2017 | 0 comments

DNA from the Deep

What lives in the deep sea? For the most part, we still don’t know.

That is why the Ocean Genome Legacy (OGL) has joined with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) ship Okeanos Explorer to help discover and preserve deep-sea biodiversity. This week, thanks to this partnership, OGL added a new set of rare deep-sea DNA samples to its online catalog.

Okeanos is the Greek word for ocean, and Okeanos Explorer is one of America’s premier ships for ocean exploration. Currently, Okeanos Explorer is on a campaign to investigate U.S. marine protected areas in the Pacific, such as the recently expanded Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument in the Hawaiian Archipelago and the Mariana Trench, the deepest part of the ocean.

A researcher on Okeanos Explorer subsamples a deep-sea coral and stores it in an OGL tube for DNA extraction. Image credit: NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research

The crew uses Deep Discoverer, a remotely operated vehicle (ROV), to descend into the depths and record footage of otherworldly seascapes and amazing creatures such as corals, sea lilies, squat lobsters, and brand new species unknown to the world. The crew also collects samples using the ROV’s robotic arm. These samples are then processed onboard and subsampled for OGL using the “OGL in a box” kit. Once Okeanos makes it back to port, the samples are shipped to Northeastern’s Marine Science Center for DNA extraction and storage. The samples from these deep-sea communities from the 2015 and 2016 expeditions are available online in the OGL catalog.

Thank you, NOAA! You can follow along with the 2017 Okeanos mission live!

The OGL biorepository works with researchers, educators, and citizen scientists around the globe to preserve valuable DNA samples, foster research, and promote discovery. If you would like to support our efforts, please consider making a gift.

RECENT NEWS BRIEFS

Meet OGL’s new faces—and their new projects!

This month, OGL is welcoming a new postdoctoral fellow and two new co-op students! Did you know that some bacteria stab their competitors with poison darts? In her PhD research at UNC Chapel Hill, Dr. Lauren Speare showed how glowing symbionts use this strategy to...

New Tools for Teachers

Science teachers are awesome! Middle and high school teachers are on the front lines of science education, teaching a generation that not only can save our planet, but must. To do our small part to help these heroes, Ocean Genome Legacy and the Outreach Program at...

Mystery Fish Identified!

On a nighttime dive on a spectacular shallow reef in Cozumel, Mexico, underwater photographer Robert Stansfield spied something in the inky darkness he had never seen before: a tiny, transparent fish with bright markings, devilish eyes, and a gaping mouth...

Spooky Creatures at OGL!

It’s that time of year again, when werewolves, goblins, and vampires skulk in the shadows. This Halloween, we present some of the spookiest marine creatures lurking in the OGL collection! Barreleye (Macropinna microstoma) The barreleye must have a lot of role models,...

X