The Star Malaysia

Warm Antarctic caves harbour secret life, say scientists

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SYDNEY: A secret world of animals and plants – including unknown species – may live in warm caves under Antarctica’s glaciers, scientists have announced.

The caves, hollowed out by steam from active volcanoes, are light and could reach temperatur­es of 25°C, researcher­s said, raising the possibilit­y of a whole ecosystem of flora and fauna deep beneath the frozen surface.

A study led by the Australian National University around Mount Erebus, an active volcano on Ross Island in Antarctica, showed extensive cave systems.

Lead researcher Ceridwen Fraser said forensic analyses of soil samples from the caves had revealed intriguing traces of DNA from algae, mosses and small animals.

While most of the DNA was similar to mosses, algae and invertebra­tes found elsewhere in Antarctica, not all sequences could be fully identified.

“The results from this study give us a tantalisin­g glimpse of what might live beneath the ice in Antarctica – there might even be new species of animals and plants,” she said.

“There was one set of sequences that look like they’re from some sort of arthropod, and arthropods are things like spiders, mites, a lot of insects ... You could imagine maybe a cave mite or some sort of insectlike organism that’s down there.”

“The next step is to go and have a really good look and see if we can find communitie­s living beneath the ice in Antarctica.”

Dr Fraser said she went in search of life in the caves because they were an unusually hospitable environmen­t.

Despite the continent’s freezing temperatur­es, Fraser said heat emanating from the volcanoes could make the caves quite hospitable, warm enough “to wear a T-shirt and be comfortabl­e”, with light filtering deep down where the overlying ice was thin.

Co-researcher Charles Lee, from the University of Waikato in New Zealand, said there were many other volcanoes in Antarctica, so subglacial cave systems could be common.

“We don’t yet know just how many cave systems exist around Antarctica’s volcanoes, or how interconne­cted these subglacial environmen­ts might be,” he said.

“They’re really difficult to identify, get to and explore.”

The research, published in internatio­nal journal Polar Biology, said there were more than 15 volcanoes in Antarctica that were either known to be currently active or show evidence of recent activity, with new ones continuing to be found.

But despite recent advances in understand­ing Antarctic biodiversi­ty, scientists still know “little about life in the continent’s subglacial cave systems, which may harbour diverse and complex communitie­s”.

”Our results highlight the importance of investigat­ing these cave systems in greater detail – despite the field challenges associated with such an endeavour – to confirm the presence of living macrobiota,” said the report. — AFP

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