September 5, 2019 at 6:35 p.m. PDT
“I
am unashamedly using the monster as a way to attract interest so I can
talk about the science I want to talk about,” the geneticist and
professor at New Zealand’s University of Otago told The Washington Post
after a hectic day of dozens of media interviews.
More
than a thousand Loch Ness Monster encounters are recorded in an
official “Sightings Register.” The reports go back as far as 565 A.D.,
when an Irish saint is said to have saved a man from being attacked by a
river monster.
Rumors
intensified in the 1930s, when a road opened near the Scottish loch and
when a reference to a “Loch Ness Monster” appeared in the Inverness
Courier. One man swore he saw a 25-foot-long, 4-foot-high creature
without limbs cross the road in front of him and his wife. Some monster
sightings were debunked — a famous 1934 photo published in the Daily
Mail turned out to be a hoax, staged with a model head attached to a toy
submarine — but interest in the legend persisted.
Trying
to explain the repeated reports of a giant sea creature, some theorized
that the loch was home to a Jurassic-era reptile and pointed to a giant
extinct animal called a plesiosaur. Others speculated about a huge
fish, swimming circus elephants or just floating branches.
Gemmell
and his colleagues say they can use science to rule out some of the
ideas after analyzing DNA in 250 water samples from Loch Ness.
The
DNA allowed them to build a detailed picture of the creatures living in
what Gemmell called “the world’s most famous body of water,” down to
tiny bacteria. They found no evidence that the lake harbors a
prehistoric reptile, and no DNA from sharks, catfish or sturgeons, some
of the other animals put forth to explain the myth.
There was a lot of genetic material from eels, however.
“The
remaining theory that we cannot refute based on the environmental DNA
data obtained is that what people are seeing is a very large eel,” the
team wrote on its website explaining the findings.
It’s
still unclear, the scientists said, whether the loch contains an eel
big enough to account for descriptions of a monster. Some researchers
have raised the eel theory before, and people have reported seeing large
eels in Loch Ness. A video shot in 2007 captures a four-meter marine
animal on the loch’s surface that could have been an eel, Gemmell’s team
says, although they acknowledge that such a large specimen would be
unusual.
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Not
everyone is impressed with their findings. Steve Feltham, who holds the
Guinness Book of Records’ distinction for longest continuous Loch Ness
monster hunt, told the BBC that the idea of eels living in the loch was no revelation. Other animals have yet to be ruled out, he added.
“A
12-year-old boy could tell you there are eels in Loch Ness,” Feltham
said. “I caught eels in the loch when I was a 12-year-old boy.”
Young
eels migrate thousands of miles to Scottish rivers and lochs — lakes or
sea inlets — from waters near the Bahamas, the BBC reported. The
creatures lay eggs after their journeys.
Confronted at a news conference with the fact that the heaviest recorded
European eel ever caught clocked in at 5.38 kilograms (almost 12
pounds), Gemmell admitted, “It doesn’t sound like a monster, does it?”
“But based on the evidence we’ve accumulated, we can’t exclude it as a possibility,” he said, according to the Guardian.
Gemmell
is not sure he will be involved in any further investigation to back up
the eel hypothesis. He said he’s achieved what he wanted with a project
that’s captured the public imagination like no other study he’s
published. Last year, he said, the scientists’ work at Loch Ness
generated about 3,000 media stories within a few weeks — before they’d
made a single finding.
At first, Gemmell said, he worried that an exhaustive investigation into Loch Ness was silly.
But
then he talked to his 9-year-old son, who told his friends, who thought
the project sounded awesome. After seeing the children’s fascination,
Gemmell realized that taking a serious scientific look at the famous
loch could stir up public interest in techniques to track biodiversity.
Gemmell’s
team took advantage of “environmental DNA,” the genetic material that
creatures leave in their surroundings. This “eDNA” lets scientists learn
about habitats without disrupting them and harming the animals they’re
trying to study, Gemmell’s team explains on its website.
The
strategy will “make a real difference in how we monitor and protect the
world’s increasingly fragile ecosystems,” they write.
A
Travel Channel documentary on the team’s work airing in Britain and the
United States later this month will bring the project to an even
broader audience.
“Loch Ness attracts people in a way that few other things ever could,” Gemmell said.
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