1,121 new species were identified between mid‑2025 and mid‑2026, a 54 % jump over the previous year.
Rapid Discovery Through Existing Collections
The alliance’s 13 expeditions and nine workshops yielded 728 species from museum archives and private collections, proving that untapped specimens can outpace fresh dives. 0.001 % of the seafloor has ever been directly observed, yet the backlog of unknown species remains vast.
High‑Profile Finds: From Ribbon Worms to Glass Sponges
Off East Timor, researchers uncovered vividly striped ribbon worms that may harbor novel toxins with therapeutic potential. In Japan, a human‑operated submersible revealed spiky sponges with silica skeletons and transparent polychaete worms that bioluminesce, hinting at complex symbiotic relationships.
Implications for Conservation and Drug Discovery
The Ocean Census NOVA platform now hosts thousands of entries, making data openly accessible to taxonomists and conservationists. 13 years on average elapse between specimen collection and formal description; this accelerated pipeline could slash that timeline dramatically.
With the Ocean Census Alliance’s accelerated pipeline, the next decade could see a decade‑long backlog of marine species descriptions shrink to a few years, unlocking new ecological insights and therapeutic targets.
Source: Ocean census reveals more than 1,100 new species
Domain: scientificamerican.com
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