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Antarctic sea creatures uncovered

- Words by Brandon Specktor

“Researcher­s have gotten a rare glimpse at the marine life”

On 26 February 2021, an iceberg large enough to hold New York City nearly two times over cracked off the Antarctic ice sheet and began drifting slowly through the Weddell Sea. Now researcher­s have gotten a rare glimpse at the marine life living deep below the ice, finally exposed after five decades of ice cover. Cruising through the narrow gap between the newly liberated iceberg, named A-74, and the Brunt Ice Shelf in northern Antarctica, the German research vessel Polarstern took hours of footage and thousands of photos of the reclusive creatures living 18 miles below the surface. The researcher­s discovered a bustling community of molluscs, filter feeders, sea stars, sea cucumbers and at least five species of fish and two octopus species. “The first images from the seafloor reveal an amazing level of biodiversi­ty in a region that was covered by thick ice for decades,” said researcher­s with the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) in Bremerhave­n, Germany, which is in charge of the Polarstern mission. It’s not unusual to find marine life thriving near the Antarctic seafloor. Hundreds of marine species live in the frigid waters – sometimes in truly unexpected places. On 15 February, researcher­s announced the discovery of a colony of sea sponges and other stationary filter feeders clinging to a rock 900 metres below the Filchner-ronne Ice Shelf, which lies near the Antarctic Peninsula. That discovery, like the Polarstern’s new survey of the Weddell seafloor, threw researcher­s for a bit of a loop, mainly due to the presence of stationary filter feeders. These animals, which include corals and sponges, perch in place and wait for nutrients to come to them, usually in the form of phytoplank­ton, a type of microscopi­c marine algae. Phytoplank­ton rely on sunshine for photosynth­esis and tend to float in the upper part of the ocean, where the water gets the most sunlight. Finding communitie­s of phytoplank­ton-gobbling sea creatures living in the darkness deep below the Antarctic ice is counter-intuitive to say the least. Somehow, nutrients, either in the form of phytoplank­ton or organic particles flushed to sea with the ice above, are being dragged thousands of metres below the ice shelves of Antarctica to feed the bottom-dwelling creatures there. To learn more about the region’s ecosystem, the research team gathered some sediment samples from the seafloor, which will help reveal the water’s nutrient content. The team also stationed research buoys in the area to gather data about the water’s temperatur­e and salinity, as well as ocean current speeds in the Weddell Sea. This data will help scientists build more accurate climate models for the region. Antarctica is one of the fastest warming parts of the planet and is at risk of losing most of its ice permanentl­y if greenhouse gas emissions aren’t curbed this century.

 ??  ?? Sea anemones and filter feeders cling to the rocks hundreds of metres below the Brunt Ice Shelf in Antarctica, where a gargantuan iceberg just broke free
Sea anemones and filter feeders cling to the rocks hundreds of metres below the Brunt Ice Shelf in Antarctica, where a gargantuan iceberg just broke free

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