The remote and lightless deep-sea floor has long been thought to be protected from events on the surface, such as global warming. But it now seems that climate change impinges on the rhythm of life on the seabed after all.Henry Ruhl and his colleagues at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California, regularly visit a site off the California coast to study the ocean floor, 4,100 metres below.They retrieve samples in sediment traps and measure the amount of organic matter, such as dead or dying plankton and faeces, that drifts to the bottom. And they send down a camera on a sled to photograph which animals are present. At the bottom of the ocean, the sea cucumber is king. These animals live off the gentle rain of organic particles and come in species of various colours, including some that look like purple balloons. The researchers report in this week's Science that different species are more prevalent at different times, and that these population fluctuations correlate with food availability and major climate events, including the El Niņo weather system. For example, Elpidia minutissima, an unprepossessing sea cucumber that is the colour of sediment, showed up in many photos in the years before El Niņo, when food was scarce. But it practically disappeared when disturbances wrought by the system apparently increased the food supply. By contrast, a white cucumber that is normally rare, Scotoplanes globosa, thrived in plentiful times.