The Scotsman

Antarctica bound

As more cruise ships visit Antarctica, a new breed of engaged passenger is helping collect data for environmen­tal research, writes Sarah Marshall

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The cruise passengers working as citizen scientists

Brittle and listless, resembling hairs trapped in a razor, a cluster of dark strands fills the microscope slide. Collected from the Southern Ocean, they were deposited by a living creature. A hirsute fur seal might seem the obvious culprit, but it’s an interloper who should get the blame.

“What you’re looking at are microplast­ics,” explains naturalist Bob Gilmore, recognisin­g the all-toofamilia­r fibres. “Probably washed into the water from Gore-tex jackets and synthetic fabrics.”

Looking down at my own clothes, I shudder. Suddenly, despite being 64 degrees south amidst a gallery of shape-shifting icebergs, wilderness no longer feels so disconnect­ed from the outside world.

Antarctic tourism is on the rise

As our appetite for adventure grows, multiple cruise ships have launched in Antarctica, and many more are due in the next few years. They are faster, bigger and more luxurious than ever before. Crucially, as environmen­tal concerns grow, they are increasing­ly fuel efficient too.

It’s a far cry from the wooden sailing ships that first ventured this far south, finally setting eyes on the seventh continent 200 years ago. (A Russian expedition mistook a glacier for the fabled landmass on January 27, 1820, although a confirmed sighting of the real white stuff came three days later from Irish captain Edward Bransfield, travelling on-board English merchant ship the Williams.)

During the last two decades, there have been races to ski, sled and scale our planet’s most inhospitab­le terrain, and now the baton has been passed to “intrepid” tourists eager to dip their toes into the Antarctic Peninsula, with the promise of a warm cabin every night.

Human presence constitute­s a pindot on the sprawling, vast continent. But magnitude does little to disguise the fragility of this temperamen­tal wilderness, and every visitor has a responsibi­lity to cover their tracks.

Training citizen scientists

It’s an approach adopted by expedition company Polar Latitudes, who have been operating in Antarctica for a decade. They’ve pioneered a Citizen Science programme, offered on all voyages, giving passengers an insight into how the polar regions are changing.

Travelling aboard the Hebridean Sky, a sleek all-suite vessel carrying a maximum 114 passengers, we’re on a mission to cross the Antarctic Circle, the furthest south leisure cruise ships journey, making island and continenta­l landings along the way.

Penguins, leopard seals and humpback whales are undoubtedl­y the big nature hitters on a trip here, but there’s one organism more potent than all their flippers and flukes put together: a microscopi­c marine plant called phytoplank­ton.

A dip in the not-so-salty ocean

Sat on the edge of an inflatable Zodiac, I grip tightly onto a £5,000 Castaway device which I’m about to toss into the water. In the distance, moulting gentoo chicks are frozen to the shores of Couvervill­e Island, wind rippling through their scraggy Mohicans.

Their stillness is a result of energy conservati­on rather than cold, a fact indirectly confirmed by our imminent scientific experiment. Our expensive piece of kit reveals the water salinity is less than average, a result of melting ice shelves flooding the ocean with freshwater – and bad news for phytoplank­ton, the bedrock of an aquatic food chain and a force for producing much of the air we breathe.

Data collected from our excursion will be sent to the Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy as part of a longterm study; in the short-term, it’s a sobering indication of havoc wreaked by climate change.

Signs of hope

Back on board, I study patterns in the clouds on behalf of NASA and upload photograph­s of humpback flukes to cetacean ID network Happy whale. com, who use the informatio­n to plot migration paths.

Not all our findings paint a picture of doom and gloom, though.

“We’ve seen more whales than ever in this season,” exclaims marine biologist and guide Jeff Reynolds, who cites the delayed effects of whaling bans as one explanatio­n for the surge. Whatever the reason, during my two-week stint in Antarctica, it’s a claim that – at least anecdotall­y – I can confirm.

In the glassy waters of Charlotte Bay, where an arc of white mountains creates blinding reflection­s, humpbacks roll beneath the surface, and in Paradise Bay, I watch their magnificen­t barnacled flukes refract golden light.

Shifting further south

They aren’t the only animals on the move. Cartoonish Adelies, one of the only two truly Antarctic penguin species, are shifting southward as temperatur­es rise. On Torgersen Island, solar panels power a camera to collect census data, following a study which suggested some birds are over-wintering here.

With only flocks of angelic snow petrels remaining faithful to the pack ice, wildlife sightings thin out as we approach the Antarctic Circle. An

Penguins, leopard seals and humpback whales are undoubtedl­y the big nature hitters on a trip here

amorphous boundary slowly shifting according to the earth’s axis, it’s really nothing greater than a line on a map. But for so many, it represents much more.

“This was a milestone in a sailor’s career,” exclaims the ship’s historian Seb Coulthard, who mastermind­s a celebrator­y, slapstick pantomime involving men wearing bras, women dressed as sea monsters and both sexes cajoled into kissing a wet fish. It’s all inspired by historical truths, of course.

Science holds the key

More frilly-knicker frivolity is on the cards at Ukrainian research base Vernadsky, where anyone willing to leave their bra behind the bar is served a free drink. In winter, I remind myself, Antarctic nights are very long.

But the significan­ce of our visit is far more serious. It was here, in 1985, that British scientists first detected a hole in the ozone layer, laying foundation­s for the Montreal Protocol – a global agreement to phase out substances responsibl­e for its depletion.

“If only that document could be replicated for climate change,” sighs Seb.

It’s a long shot, but not wholly implausibl­e. After all, so many answers are still locked in the ice. Even my own token contributi­ons are supporting scientific investigat­ions in a land with no sovereign, government or indigenous human population to speak of. “This place does not have a voice,” reiterates Seb in his on board lectures.

That responsibi­lity falls to us.

How to plan your trip

A 15-day Crossing The Circle voyage with Polar Latitudes costs from £8,871, including polar jacket, daily guided excursions, two pre-voyage nights in Ushuaia and the citizen science programme. Departs 31 January 2021. Book through Swoop Antarctica (swoop-antarctica.com; 0117 369 0696), who can also arrange internatio­nal flights.

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from main: the fluke of a humpback whale in Charlotte Bay; passengers on the ice by the Hebridean Sky; cloud observatio­ns being recorded for NASA on board
Clockwise from main: the fluke of a humpback whale in Charlotte Bay; passengers on the ice by the Hebridean Sky; cloud observatio­ns being recorded for NASA on board
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