The deep ocean has been viewed for the majority of human existence as a sort of afterthought, a chilly, dark basement of the earth that is supposed to be biologically meaningless. That presumption is rapidly coming apart.
An increasing amount of research, much of which has only been published in recent years, indicates that the seafloor is more akin to a silently humming network that connects ecosystems over thousands of kilometers of dark water than it is to a collection of isolated pockets.
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Topic Focus | Deep-sea ecosystem connectivity and biodiversity |
| Lead Research Institutions | Museums Victoria Research Institute and the University of Oxford, Department of Zoology |
| Landmark Study | Brittle star (Ophiuroidea) global DNA mapping |
| Specimens Analysed | 2,699 brittle stars from 48 natural history museums worldwide |
| Published In | Nature (2024) and Molecular Ecology |
| Lead Researcher | Dr Tim O’Hara, Senior Curator of Marine Invertebrates |
| Depth Definition of “Deep Sea” | Below 200 metres, where photosynthesis ends |
| Share of Earth’s Surface Covered | Roughly 60%, with average ocean depth around 3,800 m |
| Time Range Covered by Study | Over 100 million years of marine evolution |
| Key Threats Identified | Deep-sea mining, bottom trawling, pollution, climate change |
| Population Genetics Studies in 30 Years | Only 77, covering just 115 species |
| Habitats of Concern | Cold-water coral gardens, abyssal plains, seamounts, hadal trenches |
The most remarkable recent case came from Museums Victoria in Australia, where scientists under the direction of Dr. Tim O’Hara examined the DNA of around 2,700 brittle stars that were taken from museum drawers worldwide. Glamorous animals are not brittle stars. They have been scuttling down the seafloor for almost 480 million years, and they resemble distant cousins of starfish with their spindly limbs and silent movement. However, by tracking their genetic connections, the team discovered something that the previous models had mostly overlooked: people from Tasmania and Iceland, which are separated by whole oceans, were connected by protracted, gradual migrations that took place over geological time.
It’s difficult to ignore how such discovery contradicts the previous mental image. Temperature, coasts, and the chaotic fluctuations of sunlight water all constrain shallow marine life. In contrast, the deep water is remarkably homogeneous—cold, dark, and stable—and that stability appears to function as a conveyor.

For weeks or even longer, yolk-rich larvae float on deep currents on what O’Hara has dubbed a “connected superhighway.” Reading the study gives me the impression that scientists have been looking at a wide road and thinking it’s a wall.
The Oxford review, which was published in Molecular Ecology, adds an awkward footnote and comes to a similar result from a different perspective. Only 77 population genetics studies involving 115 species of deep-sea crustaceans have been conducted in the past thirty years. There is only one paper on life below 5,000 meters, which is a fourth of the planet’s seabed. There are concerns about how much of the picture is truly visible to us because the majority of the work has been concentrated in the shallower, commercially valuable zones.
One of the Oxford co-authors, Christopher Roterman, expressed the concern clearly. As he put it, we today possess an unparalleled capacity to disrupt societies that we hardly comprehend. Permits for deep-sea mining are being discussed. Coral gardens that may be older than some European cities are scraped by trawl gear. There are unidentified ways that plastic and heated water filter down. The paradox is that basic ecology is lagging behind the acceleration of exploitation.
The implication of the new connectivity research is what gives it more weight. In all honesty, damage in one location is hardly a local issue if a coral garden off the coast of Greenland is genetically linked to one in the South Pacific. Resilience in the deep water might rely on connections that scientists haven’t even identified yet. While many marine biologists are observing this, it is evident that investors in seabed mineral companies do not think the dangers are reasonable.
The entire image has a humble quality. Less than a thousandth of a percent of the world’s greatest habitat—more than a billion cubic kilometers of water and 326 million square kilometers of seafloor—has been physically sampled. Long before we did, the brittle stars were aware of the highway.
