A NEW SPECIES OF ISIDELLA BAMBOO CORAL--(as told by Peter Etnoyer) "A new species of deep-sea bamboo coral, a calcareous sea fan called Isidella, was reported...by Discovery News and MSNBC. The species will debut with a full and proper binomial in the Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington at the end of December 2008. If you can’t wait, a 52 in skeleton from 3400 ft in the deep Gulf of Alaska is now on display in Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History's Sant Ocean Hall. This is, as they say, “my new species”. Folks do you that favor when you’ve been studying something for such a ridiculously long time. But its not really mine, of course. I’ll see the skeleton on display for the first time this January, six long years since I first saw the animal alive, in its natural habitat, through the porthole of the Alvin submersible.
Here’s the mug shot of the paratype from the forthcoming manuscript. It’s 132 cm tall, the largest bamboo coral ever collected in its entirety, retrieved by Alvin pilot Bruce Strickrott from 1032 m depth on Welker Seamount, dive 4035 in the Northeast Pacific (1). Three strategic karate chops were required to fit it in a box (read on...)."