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Supergiant Prawns Discovered In The Depths Of New Zealand's Deep Sea (PHOTOS)

Giant Prawns

First Posted: 02/ 3/2012 1:28 pm Updated: 02/ 3/2012 1:44 pm

By OurAmazingPlanet's Andrea Mustain:

Scientists on an expedition to sample a deep-sea trench got a surprise when their traps brought back seven giant crustaceans glimpsed only a handful of times in human history.

The "supergiant" amphipods are more than 20 times larger than their typical crustacean relatives, which are generally less than a half-inch (1 centimeter) long, and thrive in lakes and oceans around the world. They are sometimes called the "insects of the sea."

"We pulled up the trap, and lying among the fish were these absolutely massive amphipods, and there was no inkling whatsoever that these things should be there," said Alan Jamieson, a lecturer at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland, and leader of the expedition that turned up the fantastical creatures in November 2011.

The largest of the seven specimens was about 11 inches (28 cm) long.

"They actually don't feel real," Jamieson told OurAmazingPlanet. "They feel like plastic toys. They have a waxy texture to them." [See image of the supergiant crustacean.]

The pale, leggy creatures were found 4 miles (6 kilometers) down in the Kermadec Trench, off the northeast coast of New Zealand, one of the deepest trenches on Earth.

In addition to the animals captured in the trap, a seafloor camera more than a mile (2 km) away spied at least nine supergiant amphipods. It's not clear why so many of the typically elusive creatures were in the area. A week later, when the expedition returned to the same spot, there was no sign of the supergiant amphipods, which was "very, very strange," Jamieson said.

It appears the Aberdeen expedition has retrieved the largest complete specimen ever collected. (In 1983, an albatross regurgitated a supergiant amphipod, that, not surprisingly, was in poor shape. Researchers estimated at the time that, when alive, the creature would have been 13 inches (34 cm) long.)

Supergiant amphipods (Alicella gigantea) were first discovered in 1899, when a trawling expedition turned up two specimens from the Atlantic Ocean. The species wasn't seen again for nearly 100 years. In the 1970s, scientists photographed the oversized creatures in the northern Pacific Ocean, hundreds of miles north of Hawaii.

Then in the 1980s, scientists managed to bring back a few specimens of the giant crustaceans from the same area.

"Nobody has ever really mentioned them since," Jamieson said. "They're one of these strange deep-sea anomalies."

Although the amphipod find was exciting, the expedition's true quarry was a deep-sea snailfish that has only been sampled once before, in 1952.

"Nobody has ever caught one since," Jamieson said. Yet in among the weird amphipods? Seven snailfish.

"To do what we wanted to do we really just needed one fish, so to get seven fish was amazing -- and to get seven supergiants is incredible," Jamieson said.

"It was a pretty good day, let's put it that way," he added.

The scientists are mounting a return sampling expedition to the same swath of deep sea off the coast of New Zealand in a week.


Reach Andrea Mustain at amustain@techmedianetwork.com. Follow her on Twitter @AndreaMustain. Follow OurAmazingPlanet for the latest in Earth science and exploration news on Twitter @OAPlanet and on Facebook.

Copyright 2012 OurAmazingPlanet, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Check out this incredible supergiant prawn in the photo slideshow below.


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By OurAmazingPlanet's Andrea Mustain: Scientists on an expedition to sample a deep-sea trench got a surprise when their traps brought back seven giant crustaceans glimpsed only a handful of times i...
By OurAmazingPlanet's Andrea Mustain: Scientists on an expedition to sample a deep-sea trench got a surprise when their traps brought back seven giant crustaceans glimpsed only a handful of times i...
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12:13 PM on 02/25/2013
who else googled world's largest prawn, because they were a bit peckish, and like prawns and never tried lobster, and didn't really know if a lobster was a prawn or not, or if they tasted the same, and then got really disappointed when they said no one had eaten one of these ones.
no one?, just me then.
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rikster
buy the ticket-take the ride
12:40 PM on 02/07/2012
they'll be extinct in a month.....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MishMish7
08:47 PM on 02/06/2012
District 9 Sequel!!!
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mskittykat1326
Keeping an open mind, one post at a time...
03:05 PM on 02/06/2012
They look like giant lice.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Economike
01:46 PM on 02/06/2012
Looks a little bit like an Isopod.
11:44 AM on 02/06/2012
Not sure what it was. Cook it and eat it just to be sure. Hmmmm, takes like chicken
10:59 AM on 02/06/2012
Maybe they grow so big from years of throwing so much crap in the water. Maybe even from radiation. Sinks to the bottom and well you know the rest.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
didereaux
The Flying Spaghetti Monster is my Lord & Saviour!
08:47 AM on 02/06/2012
Adds a new dimension to the saying, "Put another shrimp on the Barbie." Have to change that to get another Barbie for the Shrimp.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Candide33
I heart Bernie Sanders
03:41 AM on 02/06/2012
That does not look appetizing! It looks kinda roachy ... I don't think that was a shrimp, it looks like a bug!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
xeronius
Mostly Straight, LGBTQ Friendly
05:48 PM on 02/06/2012
Shrimps, crabs, and lobsters are all very closely related to bugs. They just happen to be large, delicious bugs.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tmboy
Reading comments messes with my ZEN, but I'm addic
09:39 PM on 02/05/2012
I hope they put them back...
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clearthinker16
reads, investigates and thinks before making stupi
01:24 PM on 02/05/2012
interesting, wonder how it tastes
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xanas
libertarian, voluntarist, anarchist
02:41 PM on 02/05/2012
Same thing I'm wondering.
01:38 AM on 02/06/2012
On the news in Australia last night they said they weren't edible. Mind you, given the size, you'd need a knife and fork.
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clearthinker16
reads, investigates and thinks before making stupi
09:15 AM on 02/06/2012
I know all about inedible, my wife can burn water
12:54 PM on 02/05/2012
Their freshwater crawfish are nothing to sneeze at either:
http://farmingcrawfish.com/
up to 12" long
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MochasMom
Common sense since 1968
10:35 AM on 02/05/2012
Wow. Prawns are one of those things that are tasty -- but should not be inspected too closely prior to consumption. I prefer to think they come all pink and happy looking with only their tail attached.
12:00 AM on 02/06/2012
Ha!
07:41 AM on 02/05/2012
It could be a baby of monster prawn? There's a lot that we don't know about the ocean life from very deep waters.
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kilakhan
speaking my mind however wrong!
01:06 AM on 02/05/2012
i have seen and eaten bigger...
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GeneEUss
r'U.Think'n.What.I'm.Think'n?
06:51 PM on 03/08/2012
that's what SHE said....