[00:50:41] meaganputts leaves the room [08:39:54] iscwatch2 leaves the room [10:35:36] lindsaybeazley leaves the room [10:44:18] test [10:51:32] We are anticipating getting the vehicles in the water today at 9:00 EDT. [11:02:37] calvincampbell leaves the room [11:21:58] danielwagner leaves the room [11:36:19] calvincampbell leaves the room [11:50:00] lindsaybeazley leaves the room [12:02:30] calvincampbell leaves the room [12:11:05] calvincampbell leaves the room [12:33:02] EX1905L2_DIVE03 ROV powered off [12:35:35] rachelgulbraa leaves the room [12:53:11] meaganputts leaves the room [12:56:12] EX1905L2_DIVE03 ROV Launch [12:56:42] iscwatch leaves the room [13:02:05] jeffreyobelcz leaves the room [13:02:35] iscwatch leaves the room [13:06:05] EX1905L2_DIVE03 ROV on Surface [13:06:29] EX1905L2_DIVE03 ROV Descending [13:07:19] LAT : 42.680264 , LON : -64.216659 , DEPTH : 15.0279 m, TEMP : 25.47468 C, SAL : 35.44317 PSU, DO : 6.6917 mg/l [13:07:25] We will have our ore-dive call shortly [13:08:40] For today's dive, please use the following link to make SeaTubeV2 annotations: https://data.oceannetworks.ca/SeaTubeV2?resourceTypeId=1000&resourceId=23621&diveId=2610 [13:09:47] We would like to encourage everyone to use this software, as these annotations are recorded with each dive, and they make it a lot easier to find relevant segments of video [13:12:20] LAT : 42.68043 , LON : -64.216342 , DEPTH : 53.4843 m, TEMP : 7.46817 C, SAL : 32.66395 PSU, DO : 9.44163 mg/l [13:17:20] LAT : 42.680366 , LON : -64.215806 , DEPTH : 54.764 m, TEMP : 8.57368 C, SAL : 32.85955 PSU, DO : 9.13839 mg/l [13:20:34] Good morning all. Have yet to really explore into SeaTube, but will. Great resource. [13:22:07] Good morning Tim [13:22:21] LAT : 42.680339 , LON : -64.215797 , DEPTH : 54.5081 m, TEMP : 7.65985 C, SAL : 32.64118 PSU, DO : 9.36995 mg/l [13:22:40] As an aside, I am recording the high-res stream here and saving automated framegrabs at 10sec intervals for reference, as I go back and look at coral and sponge associates. [13:23:33] Excellent, thanks Tim! [13:26:14] I am sorry I missed the opening discussion. Is the thought that we will see lots of these Vazella sponges? [13:26:24] yes [13:26:29] :-) [13:27:02] with lots of shrimp in them? and other fun symbionts? [13:27:15] Looking forward to it. [13:27:21] LAT : 42.680372 , LON : -64.215772 , DEPTH : 145.2825 m, TEMP : 13.42939 C, SAL : 35.43518 PSU, DO : 5.87126 mg/l [13:27:39] i would bet there will be lots of associates :) [13:29:15] We are hoping so! These areas have been found to be much more diverse than rocky areas without these sponges! [13:32:22] LAT : 42.680218 , LON : -64.216036 , DEPTH : 299.9918 m, TEMP : 8.59704 C, SAL : 35.1639 PSU, DO : 4.90377 mg/l [13:32:29] iscwatch leaves the room [13:33:31] Hey Calvin, we got a full intact sample of the fluid expulsion "pipe"! [13:33:34] It will be interesting to see what the geology will be like here. The bathy shows old iceberg pits and scours from the end of the last ice age when sealevel was much lower and there were a lot more icebergs around. [13:33:49] Maybe some dropstones too! [13:33:53] Awesome! [13:34:52] Is there a reference that speaks to the origin and distribution of dropstones in atlantic canyons? Would be good to have this background. [13:36:25] I would be glad to see that too. I'd imagine any maps would be based on pretty sparse samples, of course. [13:37:22] LAT : 42.680267 , LON : -64.216489 , DEPTH : 299.8515 m, TEMP : 8.54749 C, SAL : 35.15831 PSU, DO : 4.9372 mg/l [13:37:54] I can't think of a single reference that summarizes all drop stones. Lots of individual papers that tie drop stones to source area though. [13:37:58] Thank you to those on the ship and the ECC of the north for making this happen. It's a privilege to being doing this and working with all of you. Thank you! [13:38:40] joanaxavier leaves the room [13:39:27] @Calvin- that's really interesting. I have looked for canyon dropstone papers for years nd agree that I have not seen one that does a look at high-altitude distribution. [13:40:18] That sounds like a good subject for a literature metastudy and then predicting distribution from published observations. Machine learning is currently my hammer, and everything is a nail... [13:42:23] LAT : 42.680368 , LON : -64.216765 , DEPTH : 308.2923 m, TEMP : 8.52545 C, SAL : 35.15911 PSU, DO : 4.95402 mg/l [13:42:31] Hahaha. Excellent! [13:47:23] LAT : 42.68069 , LON : -64.217099 , DEPTH : 300.6113 m, TEMP : 8.61998 C, SAL : 35.16354 PSU, DO : 4.88131 mg/l [13:52:24] LAT : 42.681051 , LON : -64.217694 , DEPTH : 298.092 m, TEMP : 8.62832 C, SAL : 35.16474 PSU, DO : 4.88479 mg/l [13:57:24] LAT : 42.681414 , LON : -64.218295 , DEPTH : 298.4566 m, TEMP : 8.68129 C, SAL : 35.16904 PSU, DO : 4.89116 mg/l [14:00:09] joanaxavier leaves the room [14:02:25] LAT : 42.681814 , LON : -64.218783 , DEPTH : 299.544 m, TEMP : 8.75618 C, SAL : 35.1755 PSU, DO : 4.81387 mg/l [14:07:25] LAT : 42.682056 , LON : -64.219241 , DEPTH : 304.8244 m, TEMP : 8.78284 C, SAL : 35.17494 PSU, DO : 4.46079 mg/l [14:08:04] franciscojaviermurilloperez leaves the room [14:08:12] joanaxavier leaves the room [14:12:17] Some really interesting salps/siphonophores on the way down. [14:12:26] LAT : 42.682547 , LON : -64.219569 , DEPTH : 354.9633 m, TEMP : 8.13504 C, SAL : 35.14334 PSU, DO : 4.9044 mg/l [14:12:27] squids here too [14:12:49] EX1905L2_DIVE03 ROV on Bottom [14:14:53] White lines could be scaphopods or worm tubes- wait one. [14:15:00] These are polychaetes [14:17:26] LAT : 42.682522 , LON : -64.219626 , DEPTH : 359.0281 m, TEMP : 8.09 C, SAL : 35.13522 PSU, DO : 4.99757 mg/l [14:19:20] these are extremelly nasty polychaetes, they are scavengers and carnivorous [14:19:23] Sorry, I didn't hear the ID on that polychaete. I have it as a "quill," worm, like Hyalinoecia. These have been observerd in the mid-atlantic and more sourthern canyons. Is this what someone else identified? Javier? [14:19:44] Healinoecia something [14:20:00] these polychaetes are likely Hyalinoecia tubicola [14:20:18] OKay, yes. Agreed. [14:20:41] it was one of Okeanos Explorer in 2017 in Atlantic when these polychaetes were catching squids [14:22:08] Tim, these are absolytely widely distributed, we have them from Great Meteor seamount [14:22:27] LAT : 42.682593 , LON : -64.219606 , DEPTH : 358.7607 m, TEMP : 8.13958 C, SAL : 35.1405 PSU, DO : 5.00851 mg/l [14:22:37] but here they are 'not so numerous' I would tell [14:24:15] oh.. if any tubeanemones...... can I request macro&&& [14:25:13] Hi, I think this is not a glass sponge but a demosponge [14:25:45] This is either Stylochordyla borealis or a species of the genus Rhizaxinella [14:25:47] It looks like Stylocordyla [14:25:56] it was another fish left [14:26:06] lauraanthony leaves the room [14:27:27] LAT : 42.682682 , LON : -64.219625 , DEPTH : 357.5171 m, TEMP : 8.20798 C, SAL : 35.14462 PSU, DO : 5.00425 mg/l [14:30:31] we have a common species of sea anemone in the area found on soft bottoms that looks like that – Bolocera tuediae, but sea anemones are very very difficult to identify from underwater pictures (Javier from BIO, although I appear as franciscojav in the chat) [14:32:27] LAT : 42.682749 , LON : -64.219703 , DEPTH : 356.4704 m, TEMP : 8.28269 C, SAL : 35.14902 PSU, DO : 4.97959 mg/l [14:33:49] The crab is likely a Jonah crab (Cancer borealis) [14:33:53] Just seeing this zoom- jonah crab? [14:34:41] another close species is rock crab (Cancer irroratus) but based in this zoom this looks like more Jonah crab [14:34:48] some pennatula here are white. can we zoom at ? [14:35:42] can do [14:37:28] LAT : 42.682715 , LON : -64.219779 , DEPTH : 356.6562 m, TEMP : 8.30564 C, SAL : 35.14929 PSU, DO : 5.00797 mg/l [14:38:24] forams can be [14:39:03] @lindsay can you write here the name of the seamen? [14:39:09] *seapen [14:39:32] @ joana: Pennatula aculeata [14:42:28] LAT : 42.682713 , LON : -64.219765 , DEPTH : 356.6995 m, TEMP : 8.28933 C, SAL : 35.14989 PSU, DO : 5.00823 mg/l [14:43:21] thanks Lindsay [14:47:29] LAT : 42.682834 , LON : -64.219713 , DEPTH : 356.2444 m, TEMP : 8.30168 C, SAL : 35.151 PSU, DO : 4.6029 mg/l [14:49:03] The small fish with red and white bands we saw before could be a blackbelly rosefish (Helicolenus dactylopterus) [14:52:00] more likely Fucus or Ascophyllum [14:52:15] Yeah, looks like plant material though- this yellow thing- leafy towards the tips. [14:52:29] LAT : 42.683009 , LON : -64.219697 , DEPTH : 355.0922 m, TEMP : 8.28619 C, SAL : 35.14891 PSU, DO : 4.71674 mg/l [14:52:34] do not forget, we are onlu 360 m deep, it came from slope [14:52:55] good afternoon team! I'd agree with the seaweed interpretation of the 'yellow plant-like thing' ;-) [14:55:10] What Jeff said was accurate. Nothing to add! [14:55:26] can we have zoom at tubeanemone?? next one. [14:56:21] etter with tentacles out) [14:56:24] lots of quill worms here [14:56:36] octopus [14:56:40] left [14:57:03] squid [14:57:24] oh, I looked only at face... [14:57:30] LAT : 42.683288 , LON : -64.219841 , DEPTH : 355.1644 m, TEMP : 8.30173 C, SAL : 35.1501 PSU, DO : 4.78064 mg/l [14:58:07] and there is a tube anemone, boring one, apparently Pachycerianthus [14:58:21] just behind the squids [14:58:33] ROV D2 is 10.4-foot long, 6.4-foot wide, and 8.5-foot high vehicle that weighs approximately 9,150 pounds in air [14:58:58] likely northern shortfin squid (Illex illecebrosus) [14:59:13] ROV Seirios is 11.5-foot long, 3.7-foot wide, and 4.1-foot high vehicle and weighs 2,925 pounds in air [14:59:25] Javi, girl or boy? [14:59:46] ask Mike) [15:00:19] I do not know, but good Mike called in [15:02:30] LAT : 42.683369 , LON : -64.219754 , DEPTH : 355.8862 m, TEMP : 8.34411 C, SAL : 35.15161 PSU, DO : 4.82041 mg/l [15:02:47] Normally you can put Pachycerianthus borealis [15:03:10] but I am not 100% sure about [15:03:22] Got a local confirmation. Thanks Tina! [15:04:03] it came from 20-30 m and deeper [15:04:23] might also be at the edge of a berm which rims an iceberg scour. [15:06:46] @jef, problem is we do not know how it related from species from Europe, then name borealis formally cannot be used and the specimen submited to BOLD is a different species [15:07:31] LAT : 42.683573 , LON : -64.219618 , DEPTH : 357.3523 m, TEMP : 8.40793 C, SAL : 35.15577 PSU, DO : 4.84109 mg/l [15:08:01] and// specimens from shallower water are mostly have striped tentacles - like in Europe [15:10:29] so, I cannot be 100% sure that specimens from 350 m belong to the same species) [15:11:17] monkfish [15:11:26] very tasty [15:12:03] and she is a girl [15:12:31] LAT : 42.684041 , LON : -64.216948 , DEPTH : 356.4838 m, TEMP : 8.40429 C, SAL : 35.15594 PSU, DO : 4.87709 mg/l [15:12:35] because they have dwarf males [15:13:27] Should we be hearing the pilot feed over the telecom system? Just checking! [15:14:24] Yes Lindsay, pilot feed is broadcast across all feeds. [15:14:56] it is not cable from the lost gear? [15:15:00] is the monkfish a Lophiodes? [15:16:41] tinamolodtsova leaves the room [15:16:58] I think this was Lophius americanus [15:17:25] Ok thanks Jeff! [15:17:32] LAT : 42.683759 , LON : -64.220163 , DEPTH : 354.2965 m, TEMP : 8.43587 C, SAL : 35.15663 PSU, DO : 4.90421 mg/l [15:18:22] @lindsay.. normally, when you change left and right chanels you can make pilots less audible.. [15:18:29] thank Fransico! [15:18:58] Ok thank you Tina! [15:22:32] LAT : 42.683944 , LON : -64.219902 , DEPTH : 353.9585 m, TEMP : 8.42349 C, SAL : 35.15679 PSU, DO : 4.92535 mg/l [15:27:33] LAT : 42.684074 , LON : -64.220209 , DEPTH : 353.2013 m, TEMP : 8.42853 C, SAL : 35.15808 PSU, DO : 4.94511 mg/l [15:29:10] jumping an anemones [15:31:30] is it cupcoral just in fromt of fishhead? Flabellum or similar? [15:32:19] yes Tina, good eye! Likely Flabellum [15:32:33] LAT : 42.684103 , LON : -64.220134 , DEPTH : 353.5227 m, TEMP : 8.41959 C, SAL : 35.15637 PSU, DO : 4.96372 mg/l [15:32:35] 3 species in the area, 2 at this depth, hard to say from this distance [15:34:36] Javi, alabastrum and angularis? at the depth? [15:35:38] I would say Lophius americanus for the monkfish [15:36:55] dropstone? [15:37:34] LAT : 42.684036 , LON : -64.219806 , DEPTH : 354.17 m, TEMP : 8.08205 C, SAL : 35.13788 PSU, DO : 5.18007 mg/l [15:37:47] Just wondering how far we've traversed up the line? [15:38:23] in relation to the cup corals we have 3 species: Flabellum alabastrum, angulare and macandrewi. At these depths could be F. alabastrum or macandrewi. We can keep an eye for the next one [15:38:58] 3 species of Flabellum (but more species of cup corals) [15:39:38] Lindsay, we're about halfway up the line. [15:42:34] LAT : 42.684265 , LON : -64.220246 , DEPTH : 352.6729 m, TEMP : 8.12055 C, SAL : 35.1398 PSU, DO : 5.16278 mg/l [15:42:48] another Flabellum left [15:42:49] @Jeff - thank you! [15:43:27] and these white things apparently also Flabellum [15:47:35] LAT : 42.684554 , LON : -64.220341 , DEPTH : 352.7805 m, TEMP : 8.1173 C, SAL : 35.13868 PSU, DO : 5.18753 mg/l [15:52:25] how long will be the dive? [15:52:35] LAT : 42.684898 , LON : -64.220439 , DEPTH : 351.1258 m, TEMP : 8.17753 C, SAL : 35.13305 PSU, DO : 5.15161 mg/l [15:53:45] Hi Tina, we anticipate being on the seafloor until ~~16:15 EDT, so another 4:15 h [15:54:05] Thanks, daniel! [15:55:36] rachelgulbraa leaves the room [15:55:40] Hi all, for those of us following the dive remotely it's proving very difficult to follow what Jeffrey is saying [15:55:55] there are many overlapping voices [15:57:36] LAT : 42.685026 , LON : -64.220225 , DEPTH : 350.4067 m, TEMP : 8.2054 C, SAL : 35.14356 PSU, DO : 5.14014 mg/l [15:58:04] this particular sponge we are looking for... it is hard substrate or soft substrate sponge? [15:58:47] OK. Jeff is gone completely from the audiofeed [15:59:36] heatherjudkins leaves the room [16:01:48] ok, got it now! Just changed the audio setting. All good now, thanks Jeff and Tina for the tip [16:02:05] Tina, it is a rossellid sponge should be on hard substrate [16:02:23] thanks meagan! [16:02:36] LAT : 42.685197 , LON : -64.220656 , DEPTH : 348.1696 m, TEMP : 8.07554 C, SAL : 35.13755 PSU, DO : 5.22577 mg/l [16:02:58] no hard substrate visible ahead? [16:03:30] the backscatter looks like there should be [16:05:02] Yes! Megan is right. Vazella lives on hard substrate, but we use to find them on rocks and boulders that can be surrounded by soft bottom. So we hope to see more boulders and rock ahead [16:06:02] meagan, if you see darker tubeanemone, can we have another zoom? just for color-morph? [16:07:37] LAT : 42.685408 , LON : -64.220344 , DEPTH : 349.7715 m, TEMP : 7.79774 C, SAL : 35.12316 PSU, DO : 5.38671 mg/l [16:07:41] and small anemones close to fish head apparently zoanthids [16:08:03] do we have an ID for this fish? [16:08:49] By no means am I a fish expert, I've just watched a lot of these dives. The fish looked like a witch flounder to me based on the black fin? Would need confirmation from an expert though [16:11:02] why it called whitch flounder? [16:12:37] LAT : 42.685476 , LON : -64.220477 , DEPTH : 346.8872 m, TEMP : 7.82257 C, SAL : 35.12425 PSU, DO : 5.38092 mg/l [16:14:12] it cannot be diurnal migration of planktonic organisms? [16:14:30] that catch all these animals here? [16:17:38] LAT : 42.685774 , LON : -64.220762 , DEPTH : 343.3811 m, TEMP : 7.95453 C, SAL : 35.13048 PSU, DO : 5.30368 mg/l [16:18:28] Yes, the crustacean is likely northern krill, Meganyctiphanes norvegica, is a species of krill very common in this area [16:22:38] LAT : 42.685862 , LON : -64.220734 , DEPTH : 343.3441 m, TEMP : 7.82454 C, SAL : 35.12399 PSU, DO : 5.37166 mg/l [16:27:39] LAT : 42.686046 , LON : -64.220894 , DEPTH : 343.4 m, TEMP : 7.85345 C, SAL : 35.12381 PSU, DO : 5.34668 mg/l [16:29:47] can you zoom in [16:30:26] Sorry Javier, just saw this, we just made a leap with the ship and couldn't stop so fast. [16:30:38] have to leave, will try to catch up in 1 hour [16:30:43] no problem, thank you [16:30:50] tinamolodtsova leaves the room [16:31:10] I was wondering if it was a rock crab instead, but hard to tell...it could be another jonah crab [16:32:39] LAT : 42.686347 , LON : -64.220941 , DEPTH : 340.5008 m, TEMP : 7.79561 C, SAL : 35.12351 PSU, DO : 5.40154 mg/l [16:35:02] iscwatch2 leaves the room [16:37:03] Neat hole coming up [16:37:40] LAT : 42.686608 , LON : -64.220954 , DEPTH : 338.5881 m, TEMP : 7.84609 C, SAL : 35.12588 PSU, DO : 5.37298 mg/l [16:39:23] joanaxavier leaves the room [16:42:40] LAT : 42.686574 , LON : -64.221011 , DEPTH : 337.9046 m, TEMP : 7.90973 C, SAL : 35.127 PSU, DO : 5.29408 mg/l [16:47:41] LAT : 42.686566 , LON : -64.220958 , DEPTH : 339.2318 m, TEMP : 7.86386 C, SAL : 35.13278 PSU, DO : 5.34781 mg/l [16:48:41] iscwatch2 leaves the room [16:52:41] LAT : 42.686565 , LON : -64.221099 , DEPTH : 338.3878 m, TEMP : 7.92349 C, SAL : 35.12652 PSU, DO : 5.31364 mg/l [16:56:24] mashkoormalik leaves the room [16:57:18] Are any of our shore-side scientists having problems with SeaTubeV2 annotations? [16:57:42] LAT : 42.686743 , LON : -64.221148 , DEPTH : 336.9119 m, TEMP : 8.0178 C, SAL : 35.13426 PSU, DO : 5.2597 mg/l [16:58:14] We are working with our partners that developed the software from Oceans Network Canada on troubleshooting, and I just wanted to get a sense if anyone is having technical difficulties today [17:00:38] franciscojaviermurilloperez leaves the room: Replaced by new connection [17:02:42] LAT : 42.687029 , LON : -64.221253 , DEPTH : 335.5905 m, TEMP : 8.04777 C, SAL : 35.13657 PSU, DO : 5.24604 mg/l [17:07:43] LAT : 42.687325 , LON : -64.221223 , DEPTH : 335.2366 m, TEMP : 8.1061 C, SAL : 35.13896 PSU, DO : 5.20245 mg/l [17:08:24] bradleystevens leaves the room [17:11:35] Hi Daniel, we lost the connection at the BIO ECC. Trying to call in again [17:12:41] Thanks Javier [17:12:44] LAT : 42.687511 , LON : -64.221356 , DEPTH : 335.0756 m, TEMP : 8.13535 C, SAL : 35.14043 PSU, DO : 5.20405 mg/l [17:17:44] LAT : 42.687846 , LON : -64.221446 , DEPTH : 334.4592 m, TEMP : 8.06878 C, SAL : 35.13487 PSU, DO : 5.23946 mg/l [17:22:44] LAT : 42.68806 , LON : -64.221575 , DEPTH : 333.1703 m, TEMP : 8.14056 C, SAL : 35.14066 PSU, DO : 5.18886 mg/l [17:27:45] LAT : 42.688372 , LON : -64.221701 , DEPTH : 331.6085 m, TEMP : 8.11456 C, SAL : 35.13944 PSU, DO : 5.21621 mg/l [17:32:45] LAT : 42.688609 , LON : -64.221869 , DEPTH : 330.4513 m, TEMP : 8.1552 C, SAL : 35.14192 PSU, DO : 5.19226 mg/l [17:37:46] LAT : 42.689002 , LON : -64.221816 , DEPTH : 329.5298 m, TEMP : 8.22256 C, SAL : 35.14591 PSU, DO : 5.14688 mg/l [17:42:46] LAT : 42.688971 , LON : -64.221747 , DEPTH : 329.6338 m, TEMP : 8.36606 C, SAL : 35.15266 PSU, DO : 5.08733 mg/l [17:47:46] LAT : 42.689191 , LON : -64.221978 , DEPTH : 328.2492 m, TEMP : 8.28635 C, SAL : 35.14876 PSU, DO : 5.10572 mg/l [17:50:33] Hi Okeanos, I called the technical support on the conference line and they said you are not dialed in. [17:51:10] we will look into it [17:51:15] stand by [17:52:47] LAT : 42.689385 , LON : -64.222109 , DEPTH : 326.7804 m, TEMP : 8.30348 C, SAL : 35.15045 PSU, DO : 5.10064 mg/l [17:57:47] LAT : 42.689563 , LON : -64.222103 , DEPTH : 325.6323 m, TEMP : 8.37305 C, SAL : 35.15772 PSU, DO : 5.06818 mg/l [18:00:15] rachelgulbraa leaves the room [18:02:48] LAT : 42.689943 , LON : -64.222167 , DEPTH : 324.7154 m, TEMP : 8.46621 C, SAL : 35.15985 PSU, DO : 4.98674 mg/l [18:04:57] Lindsay, have you been able to connect? [18:07:00] Yes, I hear you now. Thank you! [18:07:48] LAT : 42.689952 , LON : -64.222223 , DEPTH : 324.6254 m, TEMP : 8.49801 C, SAL : 35.16195 PSU, DO : 4.9631 mg/l [18:08:16] no problem [18:09:53] I think there are two different fish species with red and white bands, both belong to the family Sebastidae. The small one we were seeing before looked more like blackbelly rosefish (Helicolenus dactylopterus). The big one is likely Sebastes sp. From previous catches with trawl gear both species were recorded in the area [18:11:46] blackbelly rosefish because when you look inside the mouth is black and this character is used to separate them from juvenils of Sebastes [18:12:49] LAT : 42.69028 , LON : -64.222456 , DEPTH : 324.6988 m, TEMP : 8.5871 C, SAL : 35.16674 PSU, DO : 4.91911 mg/l [18:15:16] this one is likely the blackbelly rosefish [18:17:49] LAT : 42.690489 , LON : -64.222495 , DEPTH : 325.0269 m, TEMP : 8.62259 C, SAL : 35.17113 PSU, DO : 4.91188 mg/l [18:22:22] no sponges so far? [18:22:50] LAT : 42.690842 , LON : -64.222677 , DEPTH : 319.7995 m, TEMP : 8.70921 C, SAL : 35.17503 PSU, DO : 4.88176 mg/l [18:23:31] I bet sponge [18:23:40] and a white fish [18:24:45] we did see some small hyalonema [18:25:16] sponge! [18:25:40] No Vazella sponges yet :( [18:25:56] @lindsay I know :-( [18:26:22] we may be seing Sebastes as well. They can be in the same area [18:26:24] but the conditions seem about right, with all the pebbles [18:27:05] some of these are Sebastes sp. for sure [18:27:50] LAT : 42.690908 , LON : -64.222622 , DEPTH : 320.1537 m, TEMP : 8.72501 C, SAL : 35.17582 PSU, DO : 4.85902 mg/l [18:28:18] we can say that the big ones are Sebastes sp. [18:28:58] the lemon yellow sponge reminded me of Aplysilla sulfurea but this species is only known in the NEA [18:30:09] and between the small ones we probably have the blackbelly rosefish and some Sebastes sp. juveniles as well [18:32:51] LAT : 42.691284 , LON : -64.222585 , DEPTH : 318.5944 m, TEMP : 8.7974 C, SAL : 35.17938 PSU, DO : 4.82657 mg/l [18:37:51] LAT : 42.691398 , LON : -64.222887 , DEPTH : 317.3348 m, TEMP : 8.77794 C, SAL : 35.1798 PSU, DO : 4.85238 mg/l [18:39:31] it looks like a haddock, but would require confirmation [18:42:52] LAT : 42.691687 , LON : -64.222793 , DEPTH : 316.2794 m, TEMP : 8.80751 C, SAL : 35.18087 PSU, DO : 4.81062 mg/l [18:43:01] siphonophore? [18:47:52] LAT : 42.691909 , LON : -64.222657 , DEPTH : 315.9794 m, TEMP : 8.84007 C, SAL : 35.18381 PSU, DO : 4.80946 mg/l [18:49:43] The habitat documented during this dive is remarkably similar to one we documented of the Key West at these same depths on the 2018 Gulf of Mexico expedition. [18:52:53] LAT : 42.692118 , LON : -64.222787 , DEPTH : 315.5664 m, TEMP : 8.86527 C, SAL : 35.18498 PSU, DO : 4.8026 mg/l [18:54:08] annidaveerle leaves the room [18:57:53] LAT : 42.692229 , LON : -64.223151 , DEPTH : 312.7862 m, TEMP : 8.88185 C, SAL : 35.18626 PSU, DO : 4.78417 mg/l [18:58:15] franciscojaviermurilloperez leaves the room [19:02:54] LAT : 42.692561 , LON : -64.223253 , DEPTH : 312.063 m, TEMP : 8.89475 C, SAL : 35.18636 PSU, DO : 4.78872 mg/l [19:03:44] rachelgulbraa leaves the room [19:07:54] LAT : 42.692712 , LON : -64.223296 , DEPTH : 311.5451 m, TEMP : 8.89908 C, SAL : 35.18645 PSU, DO : 4.78401 mg/l [19:08:07] photic, mesophotic, rariphotic [19:12:55] LAT : 42.692954 , LON : -64.223399 , DEPTH : 310.8336 m, TEMP : 8.92115 C, SAL : 35.18858 PSU, DO : 4.77905 mg/l [19:15:49] you know what is different? there is no quil worms for last several hours [19:16:20] depth? [19:17:37] do not know... at least there was no worms since I am back [19:17:41] That IS very interesting Tina. now at ~~300m [19:17:55] LAT : 42.693053 , LON : -64.223437 , DEPTH : 310.3272 m, TEMP : 8.93675 C, SAL : 35.19004 PSU, DO : 4.75931 mg/l [19:18:24] we are about 50 m shallower [19:19:32] last worm I have seen 3 h ago; may be temperature as well? or water mass? [19:20:26] oxygen dropped a bit [19:20:47] about the time we started seeing squid? [19:22:56] LAT : 42.692847 , LON : -64.223648 , DEPTH : 310.6603 m, TEMP : 8.93216 C, SAL : 35.18787 PSU, DO : 4.76203 mg/l [19:24:43] may be it is reason, why fish sitting close to stinging anemones and spiny seapens? [19:25:36] squid predation field [19:25:40] thats what i was thinking [19:25:44] That's what we're thinking Tina. We're trailing a squid fan club and they're HUNGRY [19:27:35] it is not real pigment, it is color of sclerites... [19:27:56] LAT : 42.693191 , LON : -64.223394 , DEPTH : 310.4078 m, TEMP : 8.93496 C, SAL : 35.1897 PSU, DO : 4.7485 mg/l [19:32:57] LAT : 42.693576 , LON : -64.223597 , DEPTH : 306.8762 m, TEMP : 8.95188 C, SAL : 35.19065 PSU, DO : 4.7409 mg/l [19:33:01] Suggest to the East if that looks like that will be hard bottom. Could expand the sonar distance.... if nothing, would go east to backscatter target. [19:34:03] We can go to 250 m, but we need to keep a minimum distance from the submarine cable [19:37:57] LAT : 42.693803 , LON : -64.223701 , DEPTH : 305.0982 m, TEMP : 8.98895 C, SAL : 35.19203 PSU, DO : 4.74941 mg/l [19:42:30] joanaxavier leaves the room [19:42:58] LAT : 42.694004 , LON : -64.223669 , DEPTH : 304.8732 m, TEMP : 9.00687 C, SAL : 35.19796 PSU, DO : 4.73788 mg/l [19:45:47] joanaxavier leaves the room [19:47:58] LAT : 42.693964 , LON : -64.223388 , DEPTH : 307.1787 m, TEMP : 9.00428 C, SAL : 35.1887 PSU, DO : 4.72824 mg/l [19:48:25] calvincampbell leaves the room [19:52:24] I fear that light from ROV makes these fish visible for squids.. [19:52:39] and feel sorry for them [19:52:59] LAT : 42.69411 , LON : -64.223075 , DEPTH : 307.2746 m, TEMP : 9.00132 C, SAL : 35.19435 PSU, DO : 4.72377 mg/l [19:53:12] the squids starve if not! [19:57:59] LAT : 42.694243 , LON : -64.222793 , DEPTH : 305.6965 m, TEMP : 9.00494 C, SAL : 35.19465 PSU, DO : 4.72524 mg/l [20:02:22] I have a question! [20:02:49] shoot! [20:02:59] LAT : 42.694534 , LON : -64.222693 , DEPTH : 306.198 m, TEMP : 9.02036 C, SAL : 35.19545 PSU, DO : 4.72644 mg/l [20:03:01] If Meagan made T-shirts for cruise? [20:03:25] I did not but I could... [20:04:17] AH, I am disappointed) [20:04:39] fish looks like straydog without good anemone [20:06:36] barryeakins leaves the room [20:06:54] EX1905L2_DIVE03 ROV Ascending [20:07:00] lauraanthony leaves the room [20:07:19] thanks for the dive! it was great even withour Russian hats) [20:07:39] sorry, cannot get to conference [20:07:41] joanaxavier leaves the room [20:07:46] Thanks for joining us Tina! [20:07:59] lindsaybeazley leaves the room [20:08:00] LAT : 42.694544 , LON : -64.222537 , DEPTH : 296.091 m, TEMP : 9.09014 C, SAL : 35.20091 PSU, DO : 4.67581 mg/l [20:08:04] will be here tomorrow) [20:08:08] tinamolodtsova leaves the room [20:09:03] franciscojaviermurilloperez leaves the room [20:13:00] LAT : 42.693999 , LON : -64.222606 , DEPTH : 276.3649 m, TEMP : 9.21214 C, SAL : 35.20827 PSU, DO : 4.66861 mg/l [20:18:01] LAT : 42.694376 , LON : -64.222812 , DEPTH : 133.3583 m, TEMP : 6.84816 C, SAL : 33.50035 PSU, DO : 7.15482 mg/l [20:23:02] LAT : 42.695791 , LON : -64.223717 , DEPTH : 49.1179 m, TEMP : 5.08811 C, SAL : 31.70503 PSU, DO : 10.38777 mg/l [20:28:02] LAT : 42.695644 , LON : -64.225968 , DEPTH : 49.1417 m, TEMP : 4.71544 C, SAL : 31.68309 PSU, DO : 10.4616 mg/l [20:29:40] Thanks all for a great dive. I am aorry I missed the call [20:32:55] EX1905L2_DIVE03 ROV on Surface [20:33:02] LAT : 42.695043 , LON : -64.228206 , DEPTH : 7.4366 m, TEMP : 19.31416 C, SAL : 31.73131 PSU, DO : 7.83286 mg/l [20:46:28] iscwatch2 leaves the room [20:46:39] danielwagner leaves the room [20:48:46] meaganputts leaves the room [20:49:46] EX1905L2_DIVE03 ROV Recovery Complete [20:50:16] jeffreyobelcz leaves the room [20:55:46] timothyshank leaves the room [20:56:05] EX1905L2_DIVE03 ROV powered off [23:00:27] rachelgulbraa leaves the room