Scientists have recently unveiled a stunning array of newly discovered deep-sea creatures, revealing just how mysterious and diverse our oceans remain. Off the coast of Chile, researchers found nearly 100 species likely new to science, including a “walking” sea toad, glass sponges, deep-sea corals, and urchins. In the Clarion-Clipperton Zone between Hawaii and Mexico, over 5,000 species have been documented, from carnivorous sponges to the bizarre “gummy squirrel” sea cucumber. The year 2025 also brought record-setting finds such as Bathylepeta wadatsumi, the deepest-living true limpet at almost 6,000 meters, and Dulcibella camanchaca, a ghostly amphipod from the Atacama Trench at 8,000 meters. Other marvels include the bioluminescent “mystery mollusc” Bathydevius caudactylus, the Mariana snailfish thriving near 8,000 meters, and Bathynomus vaderi, a giant “Darth Vader” isopod from Vietnam. Expeditions to the Kuril-Kamchatka and Aleutian trenches uncovered vibrant chemosynthetic communities up to 9,533 meters deep, while dives off Argentina revealed over 40 new species, including the “big-butt starfish” and “Little Sweet Potato” sea cucumber. These discoveries, ranging from glowing predators to ecosystems powered entirely by chemistry, highlight both the vast biodiversity hidden in the ocean’s depths and the urgency to study and protect these fragile habitats before human activity disrupts them.