Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

STRANGE FISH.

1000 SPECIES. The Chinese sage who remarked that there are more fish in the sea than have ever been caught would have found his words confirmed had he known Dr. William Beebe. Dr. Beebe has just returned from Bermuda with nearly 1000 species of fish, taken from waters where ichthyologists had previously recorded a scant 800 varieties (savs the "Christian Science Monitor"). Deep-sea fish swim through "the blackness of great depths equipped with their own "electric" lighting plants—a "cold" light which has spurred the search for a self-perpetu-ating source of illumination —are included in Dr. Beebe's catch. Marvellous coloured fish, which had to be quickly copiedl in paint before their colours faded, came up with many of the nets, each of which required two hours to be pulled to the surface so that the release from pressure of as much as 2000 pounds to the square inch would not injure the specimens. There was a black fish, shaped like a dirigible, with a tentacle ten times the length of its body trailing from its nose like tbe mooring rope of an airship. And there was a tiny round fish, one-twenty-fifth the size of a silver dollar, which would have grown up to be an ocean sunfish nine feet thick and weighing more than one ton. The list goes on, and museum experts will work month »after month classifying and re-producing the finds of Dr. Beebe's thirty-second expedition. The operations off Nonsuch Island were greatly aided by the facilities nrovided by the Bermuda Government. Dr. Beebe's difficulty was not the scarcity of material, but rather that the field was so rich that he could not hope to exhaust it. The respective depth areas prove to be like the latitudes of the earth, each with its own characteristic type of animal life. Those who would search the bottom of the sea for sunken gold would find but a fraction of the wealth which Dr. Beebe brings to the surface —new knowledge 'in which all may ultimately share.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AG19300308.2.116

Bibliographic details

Ashburton Guardian, Volume 50, Issue 125, 8 March 1930, Page 9

Word Count
337

STRANGE FISH. Ashburton Guardian, Volume 50, Issue 125, 8 March 1930, Page 9

STRANGE FISH. Ashburton Guardian, Volume 50, Issue 125, 8 March 1930, Page 9