A tethered underwater robot found more than 1,000 fish nests in Antarctica’s western Weddell Sea. The nests are arranged in clear patterns rather than scattered.

The discovery sits in seafloor terrain that has been exposed after a giant iceberg broke away from the Larsen C ice shelf in Antarctica. It points to an organized breeding ground that persisted out of sight for decades.

Antarctic robot maps fish nests

A new study analyzed 27 hours of seafloor video to map geometric nesting patterns. Average nest rims measured about 4.8 inches (12 centimeters) across, a size that is consistent with adult fish guarding eggs.

“The most significant finding is the discovery of six distinct, geometric nesting patterns,” wrote Russell B. Connelly, the lead author from the University of E…

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