A Global Mission

The mission of the Ocean Census is to accelerate the discovery of ocean life to advance fundamental science, empower conservation, and fuel innovation for the future of our planet.

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The Ocean Census Alliance unites national and philanthropic marine institutes, museums, and universities, backed by governments, philanthropy, business and civil society partners.

PRESS RELEASE: Scientists discover
over 1,100 new marine species in landmark Ocean Census

News & Insights

19/05/26 | maya

World’s largest mission to accelerate species discovery reveals extraordinary new life forms from some of Earth’s most extreme and unexplored environments.

  • Scientists have found 1,121 previously unknown species, fast-tracking discovery and marking a 54% jump in annual identification.
  • Discoveries from depths of up to 6,575m include a new species of deep-sea ghost shark, a symbiotic bristle worm living within a ‘glass castle’, as well as corals, crabs, shrimps, sea urchins, and anemones.
  • Led by The Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census, this global effort included 13 expeditions and 9 species discovery workshops with leading scientists across the world.

Featured Image: Burrowing sea anemone. © The Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census/Agustín Garese

Discovering 1,121 marine species

LONDON (19 May 2026) – Scientists have discovered 1,121 marine species in a single year, marking a significant step forward in efforts to document life in the world’s oceans. From the ‘Ghost Shark’ Chimaera, a distant relative of sharks and rays in the Coral Sea, to symbiotic worms on volcanic seamounts in Japan, the findings uncover a complex array of life beneath the ocean surface.

The Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census, the world’s largest mission to accelerate ocean species discovery, marks a pivotal third year with 13 expeditions across some of the world’s most remote and least explored ocean regions, in partnership with JAMSTEC, CSIRO and the Schmidt Ocean Institute.  

With up to 90% of ocean species still undiscovered, the findings highlight both the sheer scale of life yet to be documented and the importance of building scientific data that policymakers and marine managers need to protect the ocean.

Dr. Michelle Taylor, Head of Science at Ocean Census said: “With many species at risk of disappearing before they are even documented, we are in a race against time to understand and protect ocean life. For too long, thousands of species have remained in a scientific ‘limbo’ because the pace of discovery couldn’t keep up. We are now breaking that bottleneck. By accelerating discovery and sharing data globally, we are not just finding new life, but generating the evidence needed to drive global science and policy at a critical moment.”

Species Spotlights

The ‘Ghost Shark’ Chimaera
(Chimaera  sp. 1)

Location: Coral Sea Marine Park, Australia
Depth: 802–838 metres

Often called “ghost sharks,” chimaeras are among the most mysterious inhabitants of the deep ocean. Distant relatives of sharks and rays, they diverged into a distinct evolutionary lineage nearly 400 million years ago – predating the dinosaurs. The species was discovered by taxonomist Dr William White during a CSIRO expedition to the Coral Sea Marine Park, off the Queensland coast. Today, a third of sharks, rays and chimaeras are vulnerable to extinction.

 

Image Credits: The Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census/CSIRO

‘Life in a Glass Castle’ Symbiotic Worm (Dalhousiella yabukii)

Location: Shichiyo Seamount Chain, Japan
Depth: 791 metres

Discovered on a volcanic seamount during the 2025 Ocean Census JAMSTEC-Shinkai Japan expedition, this polychaete worm makes its home inside a ‘glass castle’: the intricate chambers of a glass sponge, a creature with a skeleton made of crystalline silica. Named after the mission’s principal investigator, Dr Akinori Yabuki, this discovery was made by Dr Nato Jimi and published in The Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.

 

Image credits: Dalhousiella yabukii/© The Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census/Nato Jimi

Ribbon Worm (Drepanophoridae  sp.1)

Location: Timor-Leste
Depth: 1-5 metres

The striking pigmentation of this ribbon worm may serve as a visual warning to predators; a signal of the potent chemical defences common to the phylum Nemertea. Beyond their ecological role as predators, these worms may have biomedical significance; some of their unique toxins have been investigated as potential treatments for Alzheimer’s and schizophrenia. Discovered by Dr Svetlana Maslakova, the worms are less than 3cm long and their vivid pigmentation serves as a warning to predators, signalling potent chemical defences.

 

Image credits: The Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census/Gustav Paulay

 Mediterranean Shrimp (Caridion  sp. 1)

Location: Marseille, France
Depth: 15-35 metres

A striking new species of shrimp found in a sea cave off Marseille proves that major marine discoveries are still being made right on Europe’s Mediterranean coast. Defined by its vivid orange banding and intricate appendages, the specimen was identified by taxonomist Dr Hossein Ashrafi, building critical data for effective conservation in the pressured Mediterranean region.

Image credits: The Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census/Hossein Ashrafi

“This year, Ocean Census has shown what is possible when scientific ambition is matched by global collaboration at scale. Through expeditions reaching polar depths to tropical seas, and the science to turn samples into discoveries, this team is revealing the extraordinary richness of ocean life.”

Mitsuyuku Unno, Executive Director of The Nippon Foundation

Powering Ocean Discovery:
New Open Access Platform NOVA

Historically, the average time between a species’ initial discovery and its formal ‘description’ in scientific literature is 13.5 years – meaning species are at risk of extinction before they are even catalogued. To address this, Ocean Census and collaborators are recognising ‘discovered’ as a formal scientific status that can be immediately recorded in NOVA, a new digital platform for marine species data.

 

Ocean Census NOVA makes collected data available within weeks, or even days, through a systematic, transparent and open access approach. Driving NOVA and Ocean Census is a science network of over 1,400 contributing taxonomists and scientists from 660 institutions in 85 countries.

Bridging the Knowledge Gap
for Global Action

These 1,121 new marine species represent the outputs from a coordinated global alliance committed to transforming the speed at which we can discover marine life. High-quality data of this kind is the foundation for international action, providing the vital science required for the High Seas ‘Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction’ Treaty and the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. As the Ocean Census scales, its global network and open-access platform, NOVA, will help ensure that this critical data is available to inform global decision-making.

Ocean Census has spent three years building the systems, networks, and infrastructure required to discover ocean life at speed and scale. The method is proven – now it must be applied at the pace the challenge demands. Ocean Census co-founder, Nekton, is seeking $100M in catalytic capital to unlock $75M+ already pledged by partners, driving progress toward the ambition of discovering 100,000 new marine species.

 

“We spend billions searching for life on Mars or going to the dark side of the moon. Discovering the majority of life on our own planet – in our own ocean – costs a fraction of that. The question is not whether we can afford to do this. It is whether we can afford not to.”

Oliver Steeds, Director of the Ocean Census

For More Information

Editors Notes:
Media can access Images in the press kit here.

Newsroom Film: Associated Press Newsroom Archive  

Discovery period: 1 April 2025 – 31 March 2026

Press Contacts:

Chloe Thompson
chloe.thompson@greenhouse.agency
+44 7710 505 557

Ella Ticktin-Smith
ella.ticktin-smith@greenhouse.agency
+44 7867 432 219

Jack Hogan
press@oceancensus.org
+44 7444668184


Available for interview:

  • Dr Michelle Taylor, Head of Science, Ocean Census
  • Oliver Steeds, Director, Ocean Census
  • Mr Mitsuyuki Unno, Executive Director of the Nippon Foundation

 

Join the census

The Ocean Census Alliance unites national and philanthropic marine institutes, museums, and universities, backed by governments, philanthropy, business and civil society partners.