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Deep Sea Explorers Discover A Sponge The Size Of A Minivan

The deep-sea researchers were surveying an ocean ridge off the coast of Hawaii in 2015 and amid ordinary ocean floor fare — a bit of coral, some volcanic rock — they came across something surprising.

"Where did this guy come from? Holy cow!" one researcher said to his colleague.

During the moment caught on camera, the brain-like curves of a sponge about the size of a minivan came into view. As one of the scientists exclaimed in the video, "This is the largest thing I've seen underwater."

Now, a new study reports that it is the largest sponge ever documented, at about 11.5 feet long, more than 6.5 feet wide and 4.9 feet high. That's about the size of a minivan. In the video, the researchers immediately voiced their suspicion that it could be the biggest sponge in the world.

The massive sponge photographed at a depth of 2,117 meters in the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument by <strong>a)</strong> the ROV <em>Deep Discoverer</em> and <strong>b)</strong> its companion ROV <em>Seirios.</em>
/ Marine Biodiversity/Screen Shot by NPR
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Marine Biodiversity/Screen Shot by NPR
The massive sponge photographed at a depth of 2,117 meters in the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument by a) the ROV Deep Discoverer and b) its companion ROV Seirios.

According to the study published in Marine Biodiversity, it was discovered in the northwestern Hawaiian Islands during an expedition of the Okeanos Explorer — the "only federally funded U.S. ship assigned to systematically explore our largely unknown ocean for the purpose of discovery and the advancement of knowledge."

The study says that massive sponges like this one provide "key ecosystem services such as filtering large amounts of seawater, as well as providing important habitat to a myriad of invertebrate and microbial species." Here's more:

"The finding of such an enormous and presumably old sponge inside the Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument underscores the need to protect this area using the highest conservation measures available."

It adds that sponges are difficult to date, but some species in shallow waters could live for more than 2,300 years.

The researchers also stress that this find highlights how much remains to be discovered in the deep seas: "We're going to all these places that we've never been before, going to depths that we haven't been before, so we don't really know what we're going to find."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Merrit Kennedy is a reporter for NPR's News Desk. She covers a broad range of issues, from the latest developments out of the Middle East to science research news.
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