Scientists thought this Antarctic sea floor would be barren. But it’s teeming with life

Scientists thought this Antarctic sea floor would be barren. But it’s teeming with life


As It Happens5:29Scientists thought this Antarctic sea floor would be barren. But it’s teeming with life

When the crew aboard an ocean science expedition learned that an iceberg the size of Chicago had broken off from an Antarctic ice shelf, they knew they had to stop what they were doing immediately and go check it out.ย 

After all, it provided a unique opportunity to explore the sea floor in an area of the ocean previously cut off to humans.

Despite their excitement, the team on the Schmidt Ocean Institute vessel didn’t think they would find much life so far beneath the ice, far beyond the reach of the sun.

Turns out, they were dead wrong.

The first image that came through to the ship’s control room from the team’s remotely operated vehicleย revealed a large sea sponge with a crab crawling on it, saysย Patricia Esquete, the expedition’s chief scientist at the time of the discovery.

It was a lot of excitement,” she told As It Happens host Nil Kรถksal. “Then, hour by hour and day by day, we kept seeing more.”

A woman smiles excitedly in a ship's control room as she looks at one of the many screens that line the walls. Behind her, another woman points at another screen
Maritza Castro and other researchers react with excitement at images being picked up by a remotely operated vehicle along the Antarctic sea floor. (Alex Ingle/Schmidt Ocean Institute)

Esquete and her colleagues have documented a surprisingly lush and diverse marine ecosystem that includes corals, sponges, fish, giant sea spiders, octopuses and more, some of which are likely new to science.ย 

But it remains a mystery as to how so much life could have flourished in the dark ocean depths, someย 1,300 metresย beneath the George VI Ice Shelf, one of the massive floating glaciers attached to the Antarctic Peninsula ice sheet.

It’s also not clear what will happen to this ecosystem now that’s been fundamentally altered by the loss of that ice.ย 

“It is a very interesting discovery and I can’t wait to see all the new species discovered and to understand what maintains biodiversity in these ecosystems,” saidย Guadalupe Bribiesca-Contreras, an applied scientist at England’sย National Oceanography Centre, who wasn’t involved in the expedition.ย 

Clear white coral against a black backdrop, forming a structure like tree branches or a tendrilling crack in a window
This stalk of deepsea coral was found nearly 1,200 meters deep at an area of the seabed that was very recently covered by the George VI Ice Shelf. (ROV SuBastian/Schmidt Ocean Institute)

Esquete, a deepsea ecologist and taxonomist from Portugal’s University of Aveiro, says the crew had been exploring the ocean floors of the Bellingshausen Sea along the west side of the Antarctic Peninsula in January when they saw, via satellite imagery, that a new iceberg was breaking off from George VI.

“We immediately we knew we had to go there and explore that particular area,” she said.ย “Our expectations were a very impoverished ecosystem because, you know, normally a marine ecosystem is fed by the energy of the sun.”

A woman in a hat peers at an orange sea bug she holds in a pair of tweezers over a bucket
Patricia Esquete inspects a suspected new species of isopod that was sampled from the bottom of the Bellingshausen Sea off Antarctica. (Alex Ingle/Schmidt Ocean Institute)

That’s true even in the deepest depths, as nutrients from photosynthesizing organisms slowly rain down to sustain ecosystems below.

But for centuries, this region was covered with nice nearly 150 metres thick. Before that, the ice was so thick it touched the ocean floor.ย 

“That means that photosynthesis cannot happen … and food is not going to be produced,” Esqueteย said. “So we were expecting some forms of lifeย fed by food that is being transported laterally by the currents,ย but we didn’t expect much.”

A white stalk emerges from the seafloor, culminating in a flower-like head with a pink, glowing centre surrounded by long, white tendrils rippling in the water and backing backward
A solitary hydroid, a small predator related to jellyfish, drifts in currents approximately 380 meters deep in the recently uncovered area. (ROV SuBastian/Schmidt Ocean Institute)

If food and energyย is not raining down from above, what’s been powering and feeding this region that’s teeming with life?ย 

“That’s going to be really the most exciting research that we can do,”ย Esqueteย said.

The team collected imagery, as well asย some specimens and geological samples. Scientists will look at the geology of the region, as well as ocean currents, toย try to puzzle out “how the whole system works,” she said.ย 

Open ocean next to a thick wall of sea ice
This is what remained after a city-sized iceberg broke off from the ice shelf. (Alex Ingle/Schmidt Ocean Institute)

But the first step, Esquete says, will be to classify all the creatures they observed.

“So a full morphological study of all the species that we found, and then genetic analysis,” she said.ย 

She suspects dozens of them could be new to science.ย 

“Weย were in an area that’s been very little explored. And we know that when you explore the deep sea, when you sample the deep sea, you always find new species.”

While the iceberg calving when and where it did was serendipitous for the crew, it didn’t come out of nowhere. The ice sheet has been melting and shrinking for decades due to climate change.

University of Victoria marine biologist Verena Tunnicliffe, who was not involved in the expedition, wonders how this newly discovered ecosystem will change now that it’s been exposed.ย 

“They took a very unusual opportunity to explore a world that has been hidden under extremely thick ice for thousands of years,” said Tunnicliffe, a Canada research chair in deep ocean research.ย 

“This expedition is able to create a set of ‘baseline’ย data: the original habitat and ecosystem. And how will it change now the curtain is pulled back?ย Hopefully, it will remain accessible in coming years to measure the changes, thereby understanding the unique conditions below the thick ice.”

Esquete, meanwhile, is excited to unravel some marine mysteries.ย 

“What makes possible that array of life is something that we really want to figure out,” she said.ย 

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