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Deep-sea fish lay eggs near hydrothermal vents to keep them warm

Pacific white skate lay their eggs onto the sizzling hot rocks of hydrothermal vents in the depths of the sea, possibly because the heat speeds up their development

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One species of deep-sea fish has chosen to incubate its eggs in a seemingly impossible place: the baking hot rocks of hydrothermal vents. Such vents are openings in the seabed that spew sulphurous gases and fluids from the bowels of the Earth out into the ocean.

“This is the first time this egg-incubating behaviour, using heat from active hydrothermal vents, has been recorded in the marine environment,” says study leader of the Charles Darwin Foundation on Santa Cruz Island in the Galápagos. He suspects the fish do it “to speed up egg incubation time”.

Salinas de León and his colleagues were exploring the , 45 kilometres north of Darwin Island and three kilometres under the sea. They were using a remotely operated vehicle called Hercules.

A few metres from a “black smoker” vent, the team spotted 157 eggs. Each was about the size of a mobile phone and looked like a hot water bottle with fingers at each corner.

One of the Pacific white skate eggs, being picked up by the ROV
One of the Pacific white skate eggs, being picked up by the ROV
Ocean Exploration Trust

They used one of Hercules’s arms to collect a handful of egg cases. “We found they were at a very early developmental stage,” says Salinas de León.

Closer examination revealed that the eggs belonged to a deep-sea fish called the ().

Hercules wasn’t able to take the temperature of the rocks on which the eggs were deposited. However, the water 3.5 metres above the surface averaged 2.7°C, a degree or so warmer than water away from the vents. This suggests the vents provide a warm refuge for marine life, as “temperatures on the [vent surface] are likely to be considerably higher,” says Salinas de León.

“This is the first time ray eggs have been documented from a vent site,” says of the University of Oxford. “Usually, these sites are viewed as being too toxic for young life stages of animals to tolerate, but the tough cases of the eggs may offer some protection, and clearly the warmer temperatures will allow more rapid development compared to colder temperatures of the surrounding sea.”

Little is known about the lifestyles of Pacific white skates. “We have no information about what babies do when they hatch, where they spend their early days, [or] how long before they leave the site,” says Salinas de León.

However, better-studied relatives like the (B. parmifera) incubate their eggs for three-and-a-half years at temperatures of 4.4°C. Based on that, Salinas de León estimates that, at 2.7°C, Pacific white skate eggs would take four years to hatch.

Many other creatures live on hydrothermal vents, such as giant tubeworms and yeti crabs. The skates spend most of their time elsewhere, but the vents may be a crucial site for them nevertheless. “Perhaps this offers a window on how some vent-endemic taxa began their evolution towards life around these hostile environments,” says Rogers.

Scientific Reports

Topics: Biology / Environment / Fish / Ocean / Oceans / Reproduction / Sex