This is a link that has not been studied much in the past because the total mass of deep ocean fish was estimated to be relatively small. Recent studies however are showing that this estimate is incorrect, and that the total numbers and mass of deep ocean (mesopelagic zone) fish is in fact enormous.
Following are highlights from the NY Times article, Dark Regions of the Ocean May Shed Light on Climate Change and Other Issues:
.......Dr. Irigoien’s expedition, which included oceanographers from Spain, Australia and Norway, sailed the globe in 2010 and 2011 and last year produced a detailed report that estimated the overall bulk of mesopelagic fishes at 10 billion tons, and perhaps even more......
That figure is not only 10 times the earlier estimate but 100 times the globe’s annual catch of seafood and 200 times the estimated biomass of the world’s 24 billion chickens, considered the most numerous vertebrate on land.
Following are highlights from the NY Times article, Dark Regions of the Ocean May Shed Light on Climate Change and Other Issues:
.......Dr. Irigoien’s expedition, which included oceanographers from Spain, Australia and Norway, sailed the globe in 2010 and 2011 and last year produced a detailed report that estimated the overall bulk of mesopelagic fishes at 10 billion tons, and perhaps even more......
That figure is not only 10 times the earlier estimate but 100 times the globe’s annual catch of seafood and 200 times the estimated biomass of the world’s 24 billion chickens, considered the most numerous vertebrate on land.
Seawater
absorbs tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, including that
produced by the burning of fossil fuels. The creatures, in turn, use
carbon to build their bodies, which eventually join the rain of life
detritus into the abyss. (The bodies of humans are about 18 percent
carbon, and those of mesopelagic fish about 8 percent.)
This
carbon uptake by mesopelagic life prompted Villy Christensen, a fish
scientist at the University of British Columbia, to call the deep
creatures “unrecognized allies against climate change” and to oppose
their harvesting.
This little fish, the Bristlemouth, sure looks like an ally to me.
Picture from the NY Times
Thanks to my sister-in-law Dianne for pointing out the above article