The Star Malaysia - Star2

Tourism boom in the cold

In antarctica, tourists swim among penguins.

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“IT’S like getting stabbed,” a tourist exclaims as he plunges into the 3°C water, all under the intrigued gaze of a group of penguins.

All around Half Moon Island, off the Antarctic Peninsula, blocks of ice of all sizes float by on a calm sea, their varying forms resembling weightless origami shapes.

To reach the Antarctic destinatio­n the 58-year-old Norwegian, Even Carlsen, travelled 14,000km and spent thousands of euros.

Mostly indifferen­t to the bipeds donning neon-coloured windbreake­rs, wildlife abounds in the deafening silence of the icy landscape.

All around are penguins, as awkward on land as they are agile in water. Massive and majestic whales slip through the waves, and sea lions and seals laze in the sun.

Antarctica, a land of adventure without rulers, is “like the heart of the Earth”, according to Marcelo Leppe, director of the Chilean Antarctic Institute.

He said it expands and contracts like a beating heart, while the mighty current which revolves around the continent is like a circulator­y system absorbing warm currents from other oceans and redistribu­ting cold water.

But this long tongue of land that stretches towards South America is warming rapidly. Its glaciers are melting and its ecosystem has been invaded by microplast­ics carried by currents.

Tourists are also flocking to the area in greater numbers. This season nearly 80,000 visitors are expected, a 40% increase compared to last year.

Antarctic tour operators, however, insist they are promoting responsibl­e tourism.

“Take nothing but photograph­s, leave nothing but footprints, keep nothing but memories,” is their motto.

Even Antarctica’s vulnerabil­ity is attracting more visitors, with tourists hoping to catch a glimpse of what one day might be gone. But critics question this sort of tourism, as the emissions from world-crossing flights and soot or black carbon in the exhaust gases of cruise ships are part of what is putting the region under threat.

On Half Moon Island, chinstrap penguins – named for the black stripe on their chin – strut about in the spring breeding season, raising their beaks and screeching from their rocky nests.

“This is to tell other males ‘this is my space’ and also, perhaps, ‘this is my female’,” ornitholog­ist Rebecca Hodgkiss says.

The colony of 2,500 penguins has been gradually declining over the years. It is not known if it is the fault of humanity.

 ??  ?? Tourism scene in antarctica is booming. — AFP
Tourism scene in antarctica is booming. — AFP
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