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They found that even though they look different, the Mirapinnidae (tapetails), Megalomycteridae (bignose fishes) and Cetomimidae (whalefishes) are really the same species. The tapetails are the larvae and when they grow up they become either the bignoses (girls) or the wehalefish (boys). After studying samples taken from more than 1,000 sites, scientists concluded there may be as many as 100 times more microbe genera in the sea than they had thought. Indeed, a 2007 study in the English Channel alone yielded 7,000 new genera of microorganisms. Genus is the category of life ranked between family and species. For example the mammal family has many genera, such as homo (humans), canis (dogs) and equus (horse).
What ocean microbes lack in size they make up for in numbers. Marine census researchers calculate there are a "nonillion" of them. Never heard of nonillion? Well, it's a lot. It's 1,000 times 1 billion, times 1 billion, times 1 billion. Of course no one can really envision a number like that, so the researchers turned to the popular comparison measure
-- the African elephant. A nonillion microbe cells, they say, is about the same weight as 240 billion African elephants
-- or the equivalent of 35 elephants for every person on Earth. And that's just the microbes. ___ On the Net: Census of Marine Life: International Census of Marine Microbes: Marine Biological Laboratory: German Center for Marine Biodiversity Research: Virginia Institute of Marine Science:
http://www.coml.org/
http://icomm.mbl.edu/
http://www.mbl.edu/
http://tinyurl.com/y792dye
http://www.vims.edu/
[Associated
Press;
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