Article 4YDVW Race to exploit the world’s seabed set to wreak havoc on marine life

Race to exploit the world’s seabed set to wreak havoc on marine life

by
Robin McKie Science Editor
from Environment | The Guardian on (#4YDVW)

New research warns that 'blue acceleration' - a global goldrush to claim the ocean floor - is already impacting on the environment.

The scaly-foot snail is one of Earth's strangest creatures. It lives more than 2,300 metres below the surface of the sea on a trio of deep-sea hydrothermal vents at the bottom of the Indian Ocean. Here it has evolved a remarkable form of protection against the crushing, grim conditions found at these Stygian depths. It grows a shell made of iron.

Discovered in 1999, the multi-layered iron sulphide armour of Chrysomallon squamiferum - which measures a few centimetres in diameter - has already attracted the interest of the US defence department, whose scientists are now studying its genes in a bid to discover how it grows its own metal armour.

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