Articles | Volume 12, issue 21
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-12-6453-2015
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-12-6453-2015
Reviews and syntheses
 | 
12 Nov 2015
Reviews and syntheses |  | 12 Nov 2015

Reviews and syntheses: the first records of deep-sea fauna – a correction and discussion

W. Etter and H. Hess

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Cited articles

Agassiz, A.: Three Cruises of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey Steamer "Blake" in the Gulf of Mexico, in the Caribbean Sea, and along the Atlantic Coast of the United States, from 1877 to 1880, 2 Vol., Houghton, Mifflin and Company, Cambridge Massachusetts, 314 + 220 pp., 1888.
Aldrovandi, U.: De animalibus insectis libri septem, cum singulorum iconibus ad vivum expressis, Bellagamba, Bologna, 10 + 810 pp., 1602.
Améziane, N. and Baumiller, T. K.: In situ stalk growth rates in tropical western Atlantic sea lilies (Echinodermata: Crinoidea), J. Exp. Mar. Biol. Ecol., 353, 211–220, 2007.
Améziane, N., Bourseau, J. P., Heinzeller, T., and Roux, M.: Les genres Cyathidium et Holopus au sein des Cyrtocrinida (Crinoidea: Echinodermata), J. Nat. Hist., 33, 439–470, 1999.
Anderson, T. R. and Rice, T.: Deserts on the sea floor: Edward Forbes and his azoic hypothesis for a lifeless deep ocean, Endeavour, 30, 131–137, 2006.
Short summary
The recovery of a basket star in 1818 from deep waters of Baffin Bay is often cited as the first organism that was brought up from the deep sea. Yet recoveries of stalked crinoids from the Caribbean and catches of several bathyal fishes occurred decades earlier. However, these accidental catches remained largely neglected during the 19th and 20th century because the bathyal nature of these animals was not recognized, and because they were not tied to a known water depth.
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