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McMurdo Dry Valleys in Antarctica.
McMurdo Dry Valleys in Antarctica. Even the most desolate areas of the continent, are home to unique organisms such as endolithic bacteria. Photograph: SL Chown
McMurdo Dry Valleys in Antarctica. Even the most desolate areas of the continent, are home to unique organisms such as endolithic bacteria. Photograph: SL Chown

Antarctic biodiversity faces increased threats despite isolation, study finds

This article is more than 8 years old

The continent and its waters are home to more than 8,000 species with up to 90% endemic, but human activities are taking a toll on its ecosystems

The Antarctic and Southern oceans are teeming with life, yet protection measures are weak as the continent faces increased threats from fishing, tourism and science programs, according to a report by scientists reviewing recent studies.

The lead author of the report published in the journal Nature, Professor Steven Chown of Monash University, characterised the biodiversity outlook for Antarctica and the Southern Ocean as being “no better than that for the rest of the globe”, despite its relative isolation.

The Antarctic marine system hosts more than 8,000 different species, with 50-90% of the species endemic to the region, including sea spiders, isopods and the wandering albatross. On land, there was a “massive diversity” of viruses living in bodies of freshwater and an “extremely well-developed microbial community”.

A wandering albatross. Conditions for the bird have actually improved with increasing wind speeds linked to the hole in the ozone layer, increasing its foraging area. Photograph: SL Chown

“Most people think of the continent as a vast, icy waste, and the sea as uniformly populated by whales, seals and penguins,” Chown said. “But that’s simply not true.

“Certainly you wouldn’t see the same level of diversity as somewhere like the Daintree rainforest in Queensland, but if I was a microbiologist I’d say the Antarctic was home to an amazing diversity of organisms.”

Antarctica, roughly the size of the US and Mexico combined, was not a single, homogenous area but had 15 distinct biogeographic zones, Chown said.

These included the dramatic, 4,000 metre heights of the Trans-Antarctic Mountains, home to “really unusual lichens and mosses”, and the geothermally heated volcanoes of the north-east Antarctic peninsula, which played an important role as refuges for wildlife from icy, glacial conditions.

Increasing wind speeds, associated with the hole in the ozone layer, had also improved conditions for the wandering albatross. “Because it’s gotten windier they’re able to travel faster, and that means their foraging trips are shorter,” Chown said. “They’ve become much heavier.”

A seaspider – marine life is under pressure because of increased commercial fishing in the Southern Ocean. Photograph: British Antarctic Survey

But other forms of human interference linked to increased fishing activity, tourism and scientific programs posed a threat to biodiversity. “People have been driving ATVs [all-terrain vehicles] through moss beds, science stations have been dumping their sewage and oil spills have gone underreported,” he said.

And the 1991 Protocol on Environmental Protection, which states that the region should only be used for scientific and “peaceful purposes”, had quickly been interpreted as allowing any activity, “as long as it’s not military or a nuclear power plant”.

Only 1.5% of the land and less than 10% of the oceans around Antarctica fall under special protection. A long-running proposal to designate the Ross Sea, sometimes called “the last ocean” of the world because of its pristine condition, as a marine reserve has so far failed to be negotiated by the convention on the conservation of Antarctic marine living resources.

Generally, good control measures had prevented the introduction of invasive alien species – with the notable exception of annual bluegrass, which was quickly outcompeting the only two indigenous flowering plants on the continent: the Antarctic hair grass and Antarctic pearlwort.

Antarctic hairgrass – one of only two flowering plants native to the continent. Photograph: SL Chown

Chown said protected areas of the Antarctic should match the global Aichi biodiversity targets of 17% of terrestrial and inland water areas and 10% of marine and coastal areas protected by 2020. Achieving this required a dedicated plan for biodiversity conservation, to be implemented by the Antarctic treaty parties.

The plan would identify which areas should be protected and how they would be set aside and managed. It would also call for coordinated investigations into the drivers of biodiversity loss, including ocean acidification, extinction risk assessments and studies into genetic diversity for the region.

A plan being drafted should be ready by the end of 2016, which would then be presented to all the treaty parties, Chown said.

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