Washington [US]: A new species of marine cryptofauna has been found in the Florida Keys by an international team of researchers Atmospheric, and Earth Science and the Water Research Group from the Unit for Environmental Sciences and Management at the North-West University in South Africa. Most of the biodiversity in the ocean is made up of tiny, covert organisms called cryptofauna. There are only 15 species of the genus Gnathia currently recognised in the area, including the roughly three-millimetre-long isopod.
Gnathia jimmybuffetti, a newly identified species of crustacean that belongs to the gnathiid isopod family, was collected using light traps placed in shallow water and was then identified through photomicrographs and genetic sequencing. “Upon examination, it was determined to be a species that was previously unknown to science,” said senior investigator Paul Sikkel, a research professor in the Department of Marine Biology and Ecology at the Rosenstiel School. “It’s the first new Florida gnathiid to be discovered in 100 years.”
These tiny animals, which are found throughout the world’s oceans lead a very curious life. The juveniles are most active at night and feed on the blood of fish like a mosquito or ticks. The adults do not feed and live hidden in rubble on the ocean floor. Given their lifestyle, they are grouped as parasites, organisms that require a living host for survival.