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Sealife Swarms Antarctica
Omen? Scientists dismayed as millions of aquatic animals swarm Antarctica
                     
April 28, 2011 – ANTARCTICA  – Scientists are dismayed by the record number of whales swarming  Antarctica. The sightings, made in waters still largely ice-free deep  into austral autumn, suggest the previously little-studied bays are  important late-season foraging grounds for the endangered whales. But  they also highlight how rapid climate change is affecting the region.  The Duke University-led team tracked the super-aggregation of krill and  whales during a six-week expedition to Wilhelmina Bay and surrounding  waters in May 2009. They published their findings today (April 27) in  the online science journal PLoS ONE. “Such an incredibly dense  aggregation of whales and krill has never been seen before in this area  at this time of year,” says Duke marine biologist Douglas Nowacek. Most  studies have focused on whale foraging habitats located in waters  farther offshore in austral summer. Nowacek and his colleagues observed  306 humpback whales – or about 5.1 whales per square kilometer, the  highest density ever recorded – in Wilhelmina Bay. They measured the  krill biomass at about 2 million tons. Small, floating fragments of  brash ice covered less than 10 percent of the bay. The team returned in  May 2010 and recorded similar numbers. Smaller but still  higher-than-normal counts were also reported in neighboring Andvord Bay.  Advancing winter sea ice used to cover much of the peninsula’s bays and  fjords by May, protecting krill and forcing humpback whales to migrate  elsewhere to find food, Nowacek says. But rapid climate change in the  area over the last 50 years has significantly reduced the extent, and  delayed the annual arrival, of the ice cover, says Nowacek, who is the  Repass-Rodgers University Associate Professor of Conservation  Technology. “The lack of sea ice is good news for the whales in the  short term, providing them with all-you-can-eat feasts as the krill  migrate vertically toward the bay’s surface each night. But it is bad  news in the long term for both species, and for everything else in the  Southern Ocean that depends on krill,” says Ari S. Friedlaender,  co-principal investigator on the project and a research scientist at  Duke. –Physics.org
 King Crabs:  It’s like a scene out of a sci-fi movie — thousands, possibly millions,  of king crabs are marching through icy, deep-sea waters and up the  Antarctic slope. “They are coming from the deep, somewhere between 6,000  to 9,000 feet down,” said James McClintock, Ph.D., University of  Alabama at Birmingham Endowed Professor of Polar and Marine Biology.  Shell-crushing crabs haven’t been in Antarctica, Earth’s southernmost  continent, for hundreds or thousands, if not millions, of years,  McClintock said. “They have trouble regulating magnesium ions in their  body fluids and get kind of drunk at low temperatures.” But something  has changed, and these crustaceans are poised to move by the droves up  the slope and onto the shelf that surrounds Antarctica. McClintock and  other marine researchers interested in the continent are sounding alarms  because the vulnerable ecosystem could be wiped out, he said. Antarctic  clams, snails and brittle stars, because of adaptation to their  environment, have soft shells and have never had to fight shell-crushing  predators. “You can take an Antarctic clam and crush it with your  hands,” McClintock said. They could be the main prey for these crabs, he  said. McClintock’s colleague Sven Thatje, Ph.D., an evolutionary  biologist at the University of Southampton in England, saw the first  signs of the king crab invasion in 2007. He spotted a lone crab climbing  up the slope. McClintock and Rich Aronson, Ph.D., a paleoecologist at  Florida Institute of Technology, put together a proposal to launch the  first systematic search for king crabs in Antarctica. With Sven as chief  expedition scientist, the team headed back with two ships and a  submarine earlier this year. McClintock and his fellow researchers are  exploring causes for the invasion, which they believe is linked to  human-induced climate warming. Around 40,000 tourists visit the area  each year. “The whole ecosystem could change,” McClintock said. “And  this is just one example of a species expanding its range into a new  territory. There will certainly be more as the climate warms up.” –Science Daily
 
 (Above) Submarine  volcanism is now sublimating the outer parameters of the Antarctica Ice  sheet which will make the region more vulnerable to fracturing and  collapse as planetary tremors continue to tear at the stability of the  ice cap and rivet tectonic plates across the globe. Forces, marshalling  the unthinkable may be assembling. –The Extinction Protocol      Reference chapter on Poleshift
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
  
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