Hot water drilling in Antarctica Sophie Berger/AWI
An astonishing variety of marine life has been discovered on the seabed in the darkness hundreds of metres below Antarctica鈥檚 ice shelves, including corals, clams, sea mosses, snails and worms.聽
In 2018, a German research team drilled holes in the Ekstr枚m ice shelf using hot water and collected samples from two sites on the seabed beneath. An analysis of the samples suggests the environment is home to 77 species – a greater number than found during all previous studies below Antarctica鈥檚 ice put together.聽
鈥淚t鈥檚 a tantalising view of one of our least-known habitats,鈥 says at the British Antarctic Survey, who studied the organisms under the microscope. 鈥淭hese two samples are very rich. The thing that really leaps out is just how rich the bryozoans – the sea moss animals – are.鈥
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Radiocarbon dating shows some of the bryozoans are several thousand years old. Most of the species found are immobile, so their discovery in such a hostile and low-food environment suggests they are surviving on phytoplankton carried by poorly understood currents beneath the ice shelves.聽
They appear to be growing just as fast as the same species found growing on open-water continental shelves, to Barnes’s surprise. He says it shows how long life can persist with very little food and by conserving energy.
The research follows another study earlier this year that found a surprising array of sponges on a boulder deep beneath Antarctica鈥檚 ice.聽 The variety of life found this time suggests that environments below the ice are more habitable than previously thought, says Barnes. 鈥淧erhaps life is capable of surviving much more ice cover than we thought was the case,鈥 he says.
However, Barnes and his colleagues note that this undisturbed and biodiverse habitat beneath the ice 鈥渃ould be the first habitat to go extinct鈥 as Antarctica鈥檚 ice shelves collapse due to climate change.
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