Rare 'Living Fossil' Coelacanths Filmed Alive, Face Threats from Climate Change and Deep-Sea Tourism

January 17, 2026
Rare 'Living Fossil' Coelacanths Filmed Alive, Face Threats from Climate Change and Deep-Sea Tourism
  • Coelacanths, long believed extinct since the dinosaur era, are now confirmed as two living species: Latimeria chalumnae in the western Indian Ocean and Latimeria menadoensis around Indonesia, carrying ancient features that inform vertebrate evolution.

  • Divers off the Maluku Islands, Indonesia, captured the first in situ footage of Latimeria menadoensis in its natural deep-water habitat at about 145 meters.

  • The sightings followed more than 50 dives and two years of seafloor mapping, with two encounters verified by distinctive spot patterns.

  • There are indications of a possible local population in the Sulawesi to West Papua region, with vast uncharted deep-water areas that may hide additional individuals.

  • IUCN classifies Latimeria menadoensis as vulnerable due to its extremely slow reproductive cycle, with maturity around five decades and pregnancies lasting up to five years, hindering rapid population recovery.

  • Rising temperatures, pollution, noise, and increasing deep-sea tourism are putting deep-sea habitats at growing risk, threatening coelacanth populations.

  • Protecting deep-reef habitats is crucial to conserve this rare, ancient marine vertebrate and to enhance ecological understanding of coelacanths.

  • Researchers plan non-invasive genetic sampling in the wild to study diversity, movements, and distribution without capturing individuals.

  • The label 'living fossil' is debated; despite ancient traits, coelacanths continue to evolve slowly and offer insights into the sea-to-land transition.

Summary based on 1 source


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Divers Capture Rare Footage of a “Living Fossil” 145 Meters Below the Surface

The Daily Galaxy - Great Discoveries Channel • Jan 17, 2026

Divers Capture Rare Footage of a “Living Fossil” 145 Meters Below the Surface

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