LATEST NEWS
 - Life is 10% what you make it & 90% how you ...
 - Chelsea Hedges wins Drug Aware Pro at Marga...
 - International World Water Day 2010, Water q...
 - Jensen, Dzigas, Wach crowned Nossa Festival...
 - Josh Kerr takes out Taj, wins Drug Aware Pr...
 - Chunky swell on penultimate day of Noosa Su...
 - Joli's Margaret River Blog: Kerr's amazing ...
 - Paerata-Reid wins Kiwi Quiksilver King of t...
 - Tamaroa McComb claims the TNS Rangiroa Pro ...
 - CSIRO/BOM: Record heat/climate needs scienc...
 - Taj, CJ, Bede in Drug Aware Pro quarters: M...
 - Junior Boys and Girls take center stage of ...
    WORLDVIEW
Drug Aware Pro presented by Rusty
    CULTURE
    OUTPOSTS
    RECENT VIDEO
Von Zipper Eyewear DC Shoes European Surf Team
Surfersvillage Directories
    DIRECTORIES
 
Shapers Camps
Schools Jobs
 
    CALENDARS
 
 
 
 
 
Olasperu_60x50_2008 Surf Expo
Boardies T-Shits Hoodies Accessories & Lots more
Poll
Will the Quiksilver Pro Gold Coast 2010 winner be from;
Africa ?
Europe ?
Brazil ?
Australia ?
Hawaii ?
USA ?
    View Results
    SERVICES
Hyundi 120
Surftime Surfing the world
Surfos Curl
World Water Day 2010
Videos       News-Alert        Forum        Directories surfersvillage on Twitter  surfersvillage Newsfeed Linkcoming soon
Von Zipper
Rob Machado
Pukas April 2008
Adam Wickwire
Wetsand Swell Chart

                  Event Webcasts

    Over : Drug Aware Pro 6* Prime

    Over : TNS Rangiroa Pro Junior
    Over : GSI Noosa Festival of Sfg
    Slideshow : Drug Aware Pro

Help Chile & Haiti
250,000 dead, Millions homeless



New version of SV launching
During launch all pages may not display perfectly
New version launch will take several weeks to complete


Thank you for your understanding

  Africa     Australia     Brazil     Europe     Hawaii     USA     Industry     Int'l     Newswire  
Make a comment Print the news: Purplish ancient relative of modern shark found in SoCalPrinter friendly Send to a friend
Purplish ancient relative of modern shark found in SoCal
 




Shark News

Purplish ancient relative of modern shark found in SoCal

Surfersvillage Global Surf News, 23 September, 2009 : - - A new ghostshark species has been identified off the coast of Southern California, and it’s darker and weirder than any shark we know. The purplish black ancient relative of the modern shark comes packed with a suite of odd features that give its taxonomical family the name chimaera, after the mythical beast made from the parts of many animals.

“It’s a big weird looking freaky thing,” said ichthyologist Doug Long of the California Academy of Sciences. “They have some shark characteristics and they have some that are very non-shark.” Perhaps the most intriguing feature of the newly described species, Hydrolagus melanophasma, is a presumed sexual organ that extends from its forehead called a tentaculum.

“They have this club on the top of their head with spikes. People think it’s used for mating,” Long said. “It’s like a little mace with little spikes and hooks and it fits into their forehead. It’s jointed and it comes out. We’re not sure if it is used to stimulate the female or hold the female closer.”

The species is yet another example of the tremendous, unknown biodiversity that still exists near heavily populated regions like the Los Angeles coastline. It was actually “discovered” long ago in the sense that museum specimens of the fish existed at Scripps Oceanographic Institute. But it wasn’t until a team of researchers from the Pacific Shark Research Center and the California Academy of Sciences came together to examine the odd creatures that they realized they were looking at something new.

“There’s an old expression by a well-known paleontologist that the best place to find new dinosaurs is in a museum,” said Dave Ebert, a researcher at the Pacific Shark Research Center, and a co-author of the paper. “If you go to the California Academy of Sciences and go wandering through the fish collection, you’ll find new species just sitting on shelves there.”

In fact, he’s had his students do just that in various collections. They’ve found 11 new species of sharks, rays and chimaeras in the last three years. The latest description, lead-authored by student Kelsey C. James, was published in the journal Zootaxa this month. They made the identification not just from the formalin-preserved specimens like the one pictured above, but also from video of the living creature from a Monterrey Bay Aquarium Research Institute ROV.

Read the full article at Wired Magazine

What's your take on this?
Post your thoughts: SV Forum

New Survey: Map Surfing’s future 

More USA/Cen Amer. surfing news available here
Check the latest West Coast Surf Reports and Forecasts

New! B2B News ASBE-Surf   |  Receive News-Alerts

Source: Wired Magazine

Sharks - Surfersvillage




Margaret River Pro


  Buy:   Surfboards   |   Racks   |   Tide Clock


Fantasy Action Sports League


   Buy:   Boardbags  |  Surf Gear  |  Watches   


Roxy Pro Gold Coast 2010


Preview Surfing Yearbook | Surfers Survey


World Water Day 2010

Podcasts Newsfeeds Galleries
Email SV TV coming soon Mobile
@ CONTACT US   
ABOUT US   |    COPYRIGHT   |    DISCLAIMER   |    PRIVACY   |    LINKS   |    SITE MAP
Sacred Craft Expo Ventura