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  • I'm incredibly fortunate to go out on oceanographic voyages

  • and see environments that nobody has ever seen before.

  • One unique environment that we're studying in the deep ocean now

  • are these places called hydrothermal vents.

  • So although they appear to be very toxic and very harsh environments,

  • these are heated and chemically enriched hot springs on the sea floor.

  • Bacteria that grow there can sustain life in incredible abundances,

  • independently of the Sun's energy.

  • What we don't know is how recently these animals have adapted

  • to live on hydrothermal vents.

  • We know that hydrothermal vents have been around on our planet for at least four billion

  • years. And the oldest fossils from hydrothermal vents

  • that we know about are 440 million years old.

  • So there's a really long history of animal occupation of these environments.

  • Working with my colleague Maggie, we realised we had an amazing opportunity to

  • perhaps compare the animals living at hydrothermal vents now with ancient fossil animals.

  • So when some of the initial discoveries were made of animals at vents,

  • it suggested that perhaps hydrothermal vents have acted as refuges

  • for certain animals over hundreds of millions of years.

  • But actually when I compare the fossil and modern specimens,

  • we are finding that the modern hydrothermal vent animals have more recent origins.

  • Perhaps vents aren't such a difficult environment for animals to adapt to.

  • So this is a tremendously important discovery. We've started now to realise that hydrothermal

  • vent animals have been able to evolve and adapt to the hydrothermal vent system

  • quite rapidly, and many times over the world's oceans.

  • These hydrothermal vents have acted as a sort of evolutionary pump,

  • continuously driving the novel evolution of animals at these systems.

  • The adaptations that we find within hydrothermal vent environments are quite unique.

  • So it might be argued that hydrothermal vent communities are worth preserving

  • because of their evolutionary novelty.

  • So really it's become ever more important to understand the adaptation of life

  • in these unique environments, to get to the bottom of how life is continuously adapting

  • to environmental changes to our planet today.

I'm incredibly fortunate to go out on oceanographic voyages

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