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Ocean oxygen decline threatens deep-sea fish populations and ocean health, new study warns

Ocean oxygen decline threatens deep-sea fish populations and ocean health, new study warns 
Ecological response of fish to changing oceanographic conditions during the Holocene in the central western Aegean Sea, adapted from previous studies. Credit: Communications Earth & Environment (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s43247-025-02568-8

An international study led by the Institute of Environmental Science and Technology at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (ICTA-UAB), Spain, has investigated how marine ecosystems responded to past episodes of ocean deoxygenation. To do so, researchers studied fossil remains of lanternfish—one of the most abundant and important fish families of the deep ocean—preserved in seabed sediments of the Eastern Mediterranean, dating back more than 10,000 years. Their findings have been in the journal Communications Earth & Environment.

Lanternfish are very small deep-sea fish of the family Myctophidae, named for their ability to produce light through bioluminescent organs. Regardless of their small size, with an estimated biomass of 600 million tons, lanternfish are extremely abundant in the global ocean, possibly making them the most abundant vertebrates on Earth by weight.

During the day, lanternfish live in the dark mesopelagic zone (200–1,000 meters deep) to hide from predators, while during the night they swim to the to feed on zooplankton. Due to both their great biomass and diel vertical migration, lanternfish play a very important role in climate regulation, and the ocean food webs, connecting the surface with the . Therefore, lanternfish are widely considered a good indicator group for mesopelagic ecosystem health.

However, the shows that lanternfish were largely absent during periods of extreme oxygen depletion. They only reappeared—and in large numbers—once oxygen levels increased again, about 6,000 years ago.

Ocean oxygen decline threatens deep-sea fish populations and ocean health, new study warns 
Paleo fish composition changes in the central western Aegean Sea throughout the last 11.4 kyr retrieved from a fossil otolith record (core: M144 KC5-6). Credit: Communications Earth & Environment (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s43247-025-02568-8

The team, including researchers from Scripps Institution of Oceanography (U.S.), Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (U.S.), Biodiversity Research Center at Academia Sinica (Taipei, Taiwan), McGill University (Canada), Freie Universität Berlin (Germany), and Heidelberg University (Germany), used fossil otoliths to reconstruct past fish populations. The Eastern Mediterranean Sea, which has alternated over the past 10,000 years between well-oxygenated and highly anoxic conditions, provided a unique natural archive for studying the biological impacts of deoxygenation events.

"The case of lanternfish clearly illustrates what may happen on a larger scale if ocean deoxygenation continues. If a group with such massive biomass disappears, other are also likely to be at risk," warns Sven Pallacks, main author of the study.

The —mesopelagic zone, located between 200 and 1,000 meters deep—plays a key role in Earth's climate system, primarily through its influence on the . The results suggest that mesopelagic ecosystems are particularly vulnerable to oxygen loss. Their collapse could destabilize ecological balances in the ocean, impair its role in global carbon cycling, and pose a threat to marine biodiversity and global food security.

More information: Sven Pallacks et al, Ocean deoxygenation linked to ancient mesopelagic fish decline, Communications Earth & Environment (2025).

Journal information: Communications Earth & Environment

Citation: Ocean oxygen decline threatens deep-sea fish populations and ocean health, new study warns (2025, July 31) retrieved 1 August 2025 from /news/2025-07-ocean-oxygen-decline-threatens-deep.html
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