File :-(, x, )
Anonymous
Nearly 300 New Marine Species Found Near Australia+113 New Sharks and Rays Announced in Australia+Hundreds of New Reef Creatures Found in Australia

Looks like the earths biodiversity just took a big step up.

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/10/081009-new-marine-life.html

>>At first glance, some of the fish appear very similar, making it tough to tell different species apart. Some even share the same habitat. "Quite often, they will swim together," Last said. But by analyzing the species' DNA, the scientists were able to uncover invisible distinctions. "In some cases, what was thought to be a single species of shark turned out to be something like five species," he said.
FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF
>> Anonymous
Well, that's great news, since many of the shark species on earth are already about 90% gone, so we could use some new ones to exploit for their fins.

Mmmm... shark fin soup...
>> Anonymous
>>323319
They discovered new species within currently known populations, not new populations. Cutting a pie into 3 pieces doesn't give you three pies.

Also, Australian Fisheries Zone.
>> Anonymous
>>323326
Bah, don't bother me with details. Three species of sharks instead of one means we can fish two into extinction and still have one left. If it was one species, we'd have to fish them all to cause one extinction.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>323327
HUR HUR HUR YER SO WITTY
>> Anonymous
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/06/nudibranchs/doubilet-photography