糖心Vlog

News

Coral discovery named after our marine biologist Michelle

  • Date

    Fri 2 Mar 18

Dr Michelle Taylor

New species of coral are common discoveries in the deep sea, but it is not every day that a new species of coral is named after you.

However, marine biologist Dr Michelle Taylor, from our School of Life Sciences, has been honoured with a namesake species, Thouarella taylorae.

Although the new found coral has her name, Michelle has not yet seen it in person. Her species is stored in the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington DC, with Dr Stephen Cairns, an emeritus professor in Invertebrate Zoology. He used one of Michelle鈥檚 publications on octocorals to help him identify the coral as a new species and decided to name it after her.

鈥淚 am thrilled to have this honour,鈥 said Michelle. 鈥淚t was really touching, especially because he was my mentor for many years. He didn鈥檛 even tell me, I just saw the publication and thought 鈥榞reat a new species! Taylorae? That鈥檚 named after me!鈥 I was so surprised.鈥

Thouarella taylorae can be found 200-400 metres deep in the Hawaiian-Emperor seamount chain 鈥 a mostly undersea mountain range in the Pacific Ocean. The coral is white, looks like a feather, and stands at about 17cm high. Using scanning electron microscopes to examine the species closer, the polyps become more noticeable on each strand on the coral. Each polyp is only about a millimetre tall with 8 tentacles coming from each one.

Currently Michelle鈥檚 research is focused on deep sea connectivity and has led her on multiple expeditions around the world to study deep sea corals. Through her work she has also found and named many new species.

Explaining her passion for deep sea life she said: 鈥淚鈥檓 drawn to the unknown, we have a good idea of shallow water ecosystems function yet in the deep sea we have virtually no idea how they function. It鈥檚 also shocking that the deep sea is the biggest habitat on earth and we still don鈥檛 understand how it works. It鈥檚 our planet we should know.鈥

The deep sea is home to many undiscovered species, some species that may be up to 4,500 years old. Although the deep sea is up to 11km in depth, it still cannot escape human pollution.

鈥淭he ocean is the ultimate dumping site,鈥 Michelle says, 鈥淭he sad fact is I haven鈥檛 been on a single expedition where I haven鈥檛 seen some sign of human life in the deep sea. It鈥檚 important to keep our deep sea safe; it is part of our biogeochemical cycle.鈥