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PHOTOS: 2-foot long deep sea creature spotted off Victoria shores

ѻýOnce you get your head under the water itѻýs a whole different worldѻý

Smitten with snorkelling in recent years, the hot heat in the final days of winter saw longtime Greater Victoria resident Steph Brulot-Sawchyn dip under the waves of the Salish Sea more frequently.

A fan of exploring outdoor activities such as hiking and tide pools, he discovered the online app iNaturalist during the pandemic. Inspired by Sara Ellisonѻýs book Snorkelling Adventures Around Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands: The Ultimate Guide, he eventually got a wetsuit and became a weekend diver.

The recent warm spell meant several days in south Island waters. With the last sunny day looming, ironically the first day of spring March 19, Brulot-Sawchyn headed into the waves near Clover Point wth his brother, who quickly spotted something unusual.

Born and raised in Greater Victoria, it seemed out of the ordinary for the area.

ѻýI have not a clue what that thing is,ѻý Brulot-Sawchyn recalls thinking when he saw the two-foot long transparent creature with a jellyfish look.

ѻýSo I immediately, when I got home, posted it to iNaturalist and the Field Naturalists of Vancouver Island Facebook page,ѻý he said. After some back and forth, online experts identified it as a siphonophore and there are only a dozen or so local sightings of the species ѻý a deep sea organism ѻý listed on iNaturalist.

ѻýItѻýs not a normal species you see here so it was very cool to see,ѻý Brulot-Sawchyn said.

He was right about it being unusual, the praya dubia or giant siphonophore generally lives in the mesopelagic zone, 300 to 700 metres under the sea, said Moira Galbraith a marine biologist with Fisheries and Oceans Canada.

ѻýThey are kind of uncommon in our area,ѻý she said in a phone interview from her North Saanich office.

Though sightings are on the rise, as an El Niño brings warm surface water into the area. The Island is at the northern most boundary of the California Current which moves in this way during winter.

ѻýWhen the current changes in fall/winter and starts becoming more dominant we sometimes get these guys pushed up against our shelf.ѻý

ѻýThese things come in cycles but for this particular animal, weѻýve been pretty much seeing it sporadically in our sampling since 2015,ѻý she said.

In their usual mesopelagic ѻý think middle sea ѻý habitat, preya can be 30 to 50 metres long. Being so close to the surface, Galbraith feels itѻýs unlikely the one photographed March 19 off Victoria wonѻýt wind up washed on shore.

ѻýThis is interesting that you see these. Thereѻýs no way you should be snorkelling in 300 metres, this is not their area,ѻý she said. ѻýThey donѻýt have the ability to navigate stronger currents.ѻý

Seeing it so shallow, and so far north is indicative of recent heating .

ѻýThese are all deep water so thereѻýs something in this movement of water that causes some sort of welling that brings water from deep, I think,ѻý she said.

With more people spotting deep water critters coming closer to the surface, and washed on shore, thereѻýs more to see.

Itѻýs the only oddity so far for Brulot-Sawchyn.

ѻýLots of species out there, but nothing you wouldnѻýt expect to see ѻý except some giant sopinophores,ѻý he said with a laugh. ѻýThe thing I saw that was interesting was the amount of people out snorkelling with the weather. especially in East Sooke.ѻý

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About the Author: Christine van Reeuwyk

I'm a longtime journalist with the Greater Victoria news team.
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