Future of Antarctic plankton linked to sea ice

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By analysing a 170m-long ice core, New Zealand and overseas scientists have been able to look back in time to see what Antarctic conditions were like over the past 12,000 years. They found long-living sea ice can prevent large algal blooms from occurring in the Southern Ocean, but sea ice that breaks out and melts creates a favourable environment for algae to grow. The researchers say these large algal blooms form the base of food webs and act as a carbon sink - so it's important to understand how they might alter as our climate changes.

Media release

From: GNS Science

Future of Antarctic plankton linked to sea ice, study shows

A 170m-long record of marine sediment core from Antarctica is yielding new insights into the complex relationship between sea ice, the productivity of marine plankton, and climate change.

In a study published in Nature Geoscience, a team led by researchers at GNS Science, Te Herenga Waka–Victoria University of Wellington, and the University of Otago have collaborated with international scientists to show that Antarctic sea ice has had a tight connection to both Southern Ocean algae blooms and El Niño-linked weather events over the past 12,000 years.

Funded partly by the Royal Society Marsden Fund, the team found Antarctic winds strongly affect the breakout and melting of sea ice, which in turn has an effect on the amount of microscopic algae that grow in surface waters.

Changes in algae growth in the waters surrounding Antarctica can have an impact on Antarctic food webs, and they also play a major role in the global carbon cycle.

The Adélie Land cores from the Integrated Ocean Drilling Programme are uniquely striped like a barcode, which allowed the scientists to use techniques such as CT (computed tomography) scan-imaging and analysis of microfossils and organic biomarkers to examine the relationship between sea ice and large algae growth “bloom” events at annual timescales.

Their findings, produced in partnership with researchers from France, Spain, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States, have provided unprecedented detail of these relationships.

The researchers found algal bloom events occurred nearly every year prior to 4500 years ago. However, they then became less frequent, occurring every two to five years – a frequency similar to El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) climate events.

They attribute this shift in biological productivity to an overall increase in sea ice levels along the coast of Adélie Land that prevented annual sea ice breakout, providing evidence that ENSO and other climate modes influence multi-year sea ice breakout events.

Lead author on the paper Katelyn Johnson, of GNS Science, says the relationship between sea ice, climate variability and primary productivity is complex.

“While sea ice that persists from year to year can prevent these large algal blooms from occurring, sea ice that breaks out and melts creates a favourable environment for these algae to grow. These large algae ‘bloom events’ occur around the continent and form the base of the food webs, and act as a carbon sink,” Dr Johnson says.

“Unlike the Arctic where rising temperatures have led to reduced sea ice, the relationship in the Antarctic is less clear, as is the subsequent impact on primary productivity. Our new record provides a longer-term view of how sea ice and climate modes like ENSO impact the frequency of these bloom events, allowing climate modellers to build more robust models.”

Co-author Robert McKay, Director of Te Herenga Waka–Victoria University of Wellington’s Antarctic Research Centre, says understanding how the annual plankton and sea ice cycles in Antarctica have changed over thousands of years can inform potential future changes in sea ice, climate and biological interactions.

“After seeing a trend of gradually increasing sea ice in Antarctica over the last few decades, there has been a very rapid reversal in this trend recently with record lows in 2017. Our new results suggest such changes will have a significant impact on Antarctica’s coastal biological system,” Associate Professor McKay says.

University of Otago co-author Christina Riesselman says although the new findings come from coastal East Antarctica, the results have far-reaching importance.

“We know Earth’s climate system is dynamic and complex, and that distant regions of our planet are closely connected to one another through climate processes. What we don’t fully know is how durable those connections will be in the face of climate change,” Dr Riesselman says.

“Our new work demonstrates that sea ice amplifies the connection between the equatorial Pacific and this sector of the Southern Ocean. But the connection is lost when sea ice is absent, and the consequences for polar biology could be significant.”

She says that with strong action to curb climate change, we hopefully won’t have to confront those consequences.

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Nature Geoscience
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Organisation/s: GNS Science, Victoria University of Wellington, University of Otago
Funder: Funding was provided by Royal Society Te Apārangi Marsden Fund (18-VUW-089 to R.M.M. and 15-VUW-131 to N.A.N.B.) and the New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment through the Antarctic Science Platform (ANTA1801). Funding was also provided by the New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment Strategic Science Investment Fund (SSIF) through GNS Science (grant 540GCT32). We acknowledge funding from the Dumont d’Urville NZ-France Science and Technology Programme, MARICE project (Marine and Ice core reconstruction of East Antarctic sea ice variability over the past 2,000 years) (project nos. 45455NF and 19-VUW-047-DDU Catalyst Fund, RSNZ). J.E. and X.C. acknowledge funding by the ERC StG ICEPROXY (203441), the ANR CLIMICE and the FP7 Past4Future (243908) projects. F.J.J.-E. was funded by project 201830I092 (Spanish Research Council). C.E. and F.J.J.-E acknowledge funding by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (grant CTM2017-89711-C2-1-P), co-funded by the European Union through FEDER funds. C.R.R. was funded by a University of Otago research grant and a L’Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science Australia and New Zealand Fellowship. The Natural Environment Research Council funded K.E.A. (CENTA PhD; NE/L002493/1) and J.B. (standard grant Ne/I00646X/1). Y.Y. was funded by the Japan Society for Promotion of Science (JSPS) grant no. JP20H00193. S.F.P. was supported by National Science Foundation grant OPP-0732796. R.B.D. was supported by National Science Foundation grants PLR-1644118 and OCE-1129101.
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