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United StatesDeepest fishBernd2020-09-10 01:41:35 · 6yNo. 101694reply
Regression of muscle osmolality on depth of teleosts. No accepted reports of teleost fishes exist below about 8,000 meters. Yancey et al. 2014 theorize this is because the osmolyte trimethylamine oxide, which protects enzyme kinetics and structure from hydrostatic pressure, is predicted to reach a concentration beyond 8,200 meters which would make the fish hypertonic, presumably killing it (most marine fishes have inactive glomeruli or lack them entirely).
 
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RussiaBernd2020-09-10 01:56:31 · 6yNo. 101695reply
Is the blobfish involved?
United StatesBernd2020-09-10 02:03:56 · 6yNo. 101697reply
No, blobfish live at much shallower depths of 600-1,200 meters
New ZealandBernd2020-09-10 13:42:28 · 6yNo. 101706reply
Imagine all dose feesh that have been exterminated by man's meddling.
i cri eriteim
FinlandBernd2020-09-10 15:57:36 · 6yNo. 101712reply
I don't know enough to join in the discussion, but please accept webm related.
RussiaBernd2020-09-10 16:41:42 · 6yNo. 101714reply
Do these things affect the way we live anyhow? I mean, if bees go extinct tomorrow, we will suffer big time. But what if these guys were gone? Is this a completely different ecosystem we don't touch with at all?
FinlandBernd2020-09-10 17:09:24 · 6yNo. 101716reply
Seafood is the main sustenance for many people, we are in the same ecosystem alright. The fuckers in the webm are likely not eaten, but who knows what role they play.
New ZealandBernd2020-09-10 20:51:07 · 6yNo. 101725reply
Do humans even know enough to gage how severe their loss would be?
I suspect a lot of scavengers would dissipate and cause a chain reaction die to this.
United StatesBernd2020-09-10 22:09:12 · 6yNo. 101726reply
Cool webm
 
The deep ocean is connected to global geochemical cycles. For instance subseafloor sediments are the largest near-surface carbon reservoir on earth. Also, bacteria that respire by reducing sulfate comprise a majority of the microbial community in anoxic seafloor sediments, and the precipitation of this reduced sulfate affects ocean alkalinity, as well as the partial pressure of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
United StatesBernd2020-09-11 20:53:30 · 6yNo. 101766reply
generally speaking, if literally anything goes extinct, it can and WILL ripple out in some fashion or other.
humans being omnivores means that were probably better suited than most to deal with such things
but its more about how it would effect the rest of the foodchain, which could be very drastic
less biodiversity is pretty much universally a very bad thing.
and the further down the foodchain such extinctions happen, the greater potential they have to be absolutely catastrophic
 
idk enough about sealife to really comment too much more and frankly neither does anyone else due to how hard it is to explore the deeper parts of the ocean but i reckon it would cause serious problems for us down the line
 
im always miffed about how much attention goes into things, like global warming which thanks to volcanoes, solar flares, and other naturally occurring phenomena (not to mention third world industrialization, which absolutely WILL NOT STOP, as first world corporations depends on their cheap bullshit and psuedo-slave labor), would be very difficult for us to really control too terribly much, meanwhile were still absolutely loading the ocean with shitty plastic bags and trash, which have absolutely devastated the oceans gyres.
imo thats much more of an addressable issue, and likely has much more of an impact on the actual health of the global ecosystem.
life on earth has shown to be quite capable at adapting to changes in temperature over its history. but loading the main breeding grounds for nearly all ocean life with shitty non-biodegradable plastic and other industrial pollution? well, we really have no data points to reference what will happen in that instance.
bet its no good tho
but alas, lobbying against the petroleum industry in such a fashion is pretty much out of the question
NorwayBernd2020-09-12 03:04:28 · 6yNo. 101784reply
>imo thats much more of an addressable issue, and likely has much more of an impact on the actual health of the global ecosystem.
The PETM was pretty bad and this is even potentially worse.
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