The Phnom Penh Post

Antarctica: a climate change lab

- Mariëtte Le Roux

ADECADE ago, a thick layer of ice covered the Collins Glacier on Antarctica’s King George Island. Now, the rocky landscape is visible to the naked eye, in a region that is both a victim of and a laboratory for climate change.

“I had the opportunit­y to come here over a 15-year period, and even within a human’s lifetime, you can already see the changes brought about by climate change,” the director of the Chilean Antarctic Institute (INACH), Marcelo Leppe, said.

Observers can now see “rocks that we weren’t seeing five or 10 years ago, and that is direct evidence of the shrinking of these glaciers and loss of mass”. But even as these melting glaciers worry the scientific world, the presence in Antarctica of plants proving resistant to extreme conditions has also sparked hope for a warming planet.

Chile is one of some 20 countries with scientific bases on the cold continent. Its Professor Julio Escudero complex on King George Island is where dozens of researcher­s are measuring the effects of climate change on native flora and fauna.

“We need to quantify the change to predict what could happen in the near future,” Leppe said.

Measuremen­ts taken last year by Chilean scientists on Doumer Island in Antarctica’s Palmer Archipelag­o showed water temperatur­e had risen to 2.5 degrees Celsius (36.5 degrees Fahrenheit), up from its normal range of between 0 and 1.5. And at a depth of 40 metres (130 feet), it was still at 2 degrees.

‘Balance in the food chain’

The warming waters have attracted species previously unseen in the Antarctic, such as a spider crab normally found south of Chile. There is also a blooming of green algae which is vital for the local ecosystem, especially for crustacean­s.

“Even though they’re really small, the algae and the micro- algae are really important for balance in the food chain,” said Nelson Valdivia, a professor at Austral University of Chile.

“They supply nutrients to the rest of the ecosystem, and we know that the number of species in the same ecosystem is a very important factor in terms of it remaining in good health.”

But over a longer term, this flourishin­g of algae could unsettle the ecological balance.

The worry is “losing species that we don’t even yet know exist”, Valdivia said.

Scientists also fear the effect of warmer temperatur­es on the rest of the world.

According to NASA monitoring, between 2002 and 2016, Antarctica lost 125 gigatonnes of ice per year, causing sea levels worldwide to rise by 0.35 millimetre­s annually.

Antarctica holds 62 percent of the planet’s freshwater reserves, so the melting there could have far-reaching consequenc­es, not least by diminishin­g the salinity of the seas, which could prove fatal for many marine species.

Adapting plant life

However, the white continent also may hold the key to plant and animal life adapting to changing temperatur­es.

Already, Antarctic plants – which are resistant to ultraviole­t radiation and extreme conditions – are being used in biotechnol­ogy to give us sun protection lotion, antioxidan­ts and natural sugars.

To survive the rigorous conditions, vegetation here hoards sugar to survive harsh winter months buried under the snow.

In some mini-greenhouse­s, Marisol Pizarro, a biotechnol­ogy researcher from the University of Santiago, studies how Antarctic plants react to temperatur­es artificial­ly raised by 1 or 2 degrees Celsius.

Her finding is that mosses survive the change quite well – an advantage that could serve other vegetation in the future.

“We could transfer a gene linked to this tolerance for dry conditions to a common plant, such as lettuce or rice, to give that plant the ability to tolerate drought,” she said.

“As a result, it would be less affected by the adverse, unfavourab­le conditions due to diminished water in its environmen­t,” she said.

With Antarctica being one of the fastest-warming regions on Earth, the scientists here are working against the clock.

Those from Chile are conducting around 100 projects ranging from genetic observatio­ns in penguins, to how solar activity influences the polar environmen­t, to comparing indigenous mollusks with those in South America.

 ?? MATHILDE BELLENGER/AFP ?? Scientists walk on Fildes Peninsula, King George Island, Antarctica, on January 31.
MATHILDE BELLENGER/AFP Scientists walk on Fildes Peninsula, King George Island, Antarctica, on January 31.

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