The Jerusalem Post

All- female scientific coalition calls for protection of Antarctic Peninsula

- • By CASSANDRA GARRISON

BUENOS AIRES ( Reuters) – Climate change and human activity are harming Antarctica and threatenin­g wildlife from humpback whales to microscopi­c algae, more than 280 scientists and conservati­on experts say in urging protection­s for the icy region.

The coalition – all women – called for creating a new marine protection area around Antarctica, as government­s on last week began a two- week meeting of the Commission for the Conservati­on of Antarctic Marine Living Resources.

Two Antarctica areas are already protected: The South Orkney Islands and the Ross Sea. The new protection area, proposed in 2018 by commission members Chile and Argentina, would cover the western Antarctic Peninsula, the northernmo­st part of the southernmo­st continent.

The peninsula’s complex ecosystem includes penguins, seals and tiny crustacean­s called krill, which are the main staple for hundreds of marine animals, including fish, birds and baleen whales.

Unlike with the rest of Antarctica, one- third of which remains unvisited, there are no large areas of the peninsula untouched by humans. Fishing,

tourism, climate change and research infrastruc­ture all present challenges to the wildlife, the scientists say in a commentary published in last week’s journal Nature.

The peninsula is also one of the fastest- warming places on Earth, registerin­g a record high temperatur­e of 20.75° C on February 9.

As the region warms, sea ice is shrinking back, leaving krill larvae unsheltere­d. This could have an impact that cascades through Antarctica’s food chain, the scientists say.

Protecting the peninsula

“would show the internatio­nal community that collective action to tackle a global problem is possible,” Spanish science policy adviser Marga Gual Soler told Reuters. She called the frozen continent “a beacon for science collaborat­ion and internatio­nal diplomacy for over 60 years.”

The 289 scientists who signed the commentary are part of the Homeward Bound program, which organizes expedition­s for women to Antarctica. For decades, women scientists were prevented from traveling to the

continent’s bases due to a lack of facilities for women, said Anne Christians­on, an environmen­tal scientist at the University of Minnesota.

“Having more than 200 women join forces and say, ‘ This is our legacy, we deserve a say in how this area is protected,’ is very powerful,” Christians­on said.

The commission, which includes the European Union, Russia and the United States, has also been asked to consider marine protection areas off East Antarctica and in the Weddell Sea.

 ?? ( Ueslei Marcelino/ Reuters) ?? CHINSTRAP PENGUINS swim near Two Hummock Island, Antarctica.
( Ueslei Marcelino/ Reuters) CHINSTRAP PENGUINS swim near Two Hummock Island, Antarctica.

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