Climate change will turn coastal Antarctica green, say scientists

University of Cambridge

IMAGE
IMAGE: Dr. Matt Davey sampling snow algae at Lagoon Island, Antarctica. view more  Credit: Sarah Vincent

Scientists have created the first ever large-scale map of microscopic algae as they bloomed across the surface of snow along the Antarctic Peninsula coast. Results indicate that this ‘green snow’ is likely to spread as global temperatures increase.

The team, involving researchers from the University of Cambridge and the British Antarctic Survey, combined satellite data with on-the-ground observations over two summers in Antarctica to detect and measure the green snow algae. Although each individual alga is microscopic in size, when they grow en masse they turn the snow bright green and can be seen from space. The study is published today in the journal Nature Communications.

“This is a significant advance in our understanding of land-based life on Antarctica, and how it might change in the coming years as the climate warms,” said Dr Matt Davey in the University of Cambridge’s Department of Plant Sciences, who led the study. “Snow algae are a key component of the continent’s ability to capture carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through photosynthesis.”

Blooms of green snow algae are found around the Antarctic coastline, particularly on islands along the west coast of the Antarctic Peninsula. They grow in ‘warmer’ areas, where average temperatures are just above zero degrees Celsius during the austral summer – the Southern Hemisphere’s summer months of November to February. The Peninsula is the part of Antarctica that experienced the most rapid warming in the latter part of the last century.

The team found that the distribution of green snow algae is also strongly influenced by marine birds and mammals, whose excrement acts as a highly nutritious natural fertiliser to accelerate algal growth. Over 60% of blooms were found within five kilometres of a penguin colony. Algae were also observed growing near the nesting sites of other birds, including skuas, and areas where seals come ashore.

The team used images from the European Space Agency’s Sentinel 2 satellite taken between 2017 and 2019, and combined these with measurements they made on the ground in Antarctica at Ryder Bay, Adelaide Island, and the Fildes Peninsula, King George Island.

“We identified 1679 separate blooms of green algae on the snow surface, which together covered an area of 1.9 km2, equating to a carbon sink of around 479 tonnes per year” said Davey. Put into context this is the same amount of carbon emitted by about 875,000 average petrol car journeys in the UK.

Almost two thirds of the green algal blooms were on small, low-lying islands with no high ground. As the Antarctic Peninsula warms due to rising global temperatures, these islands may lose their summer snow cover and with it their snow algae. However, in terms of mass, the majority of snow algae is found in a small number of larger blooms in the north of the Peninsula and the South Shetland Islands, in areas where they can spread to higher ground as low-lying snow melts.

“As Antarctica warms, we predict the overall mass of snow algae will increase, as the spread to higher ground will significantly outweigh the loss of small island patches of algae,” said Dr Andrew Gray, lead author of the paper, and a researcher at the University of Cambridge and NERC Field Spectroscopy Facility, Edinburgh.

Photosynthesis is the process in which plants and algae generate their own energy, using sunlight to capture carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and release oxygen. There are many different types of algae, from the tiny, single-celled species measured in this study, to large leafy species like giant kelp. The majority of algae live in watery environments, and when excess nitrogen and phosphorous are available they can multiply rapidly to create visible algal blooms.

The researchers say that the total amount of carbon held in Antarctic snow algae is likely to be much larger because carbon dioxide is also taken up by other red and orange algae, which could not be measured in this study. They plan further work to measure these other algal blooms, and also to measure the blooms across the whole of Antarctica using a mixture of field work and satellite images.

Antarctica is the world’s southernmost continent, typically known as a frozen land of snow and ice. But terrestrial life can be abundant, particularly along its coastline, and is responding rapidly to climate changes in the region. Mosses and lichens form the two biggest visible groups of photosynthesising organisms, and have been the most studied to date. This new study has found that microscopic algae also play an important role in Antarctica’s ecosystem and its carbon cycling.

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From EurekAlert!

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May 20, 2020 10:09 am

Typical EurkAlert nonsense of grasping at straws to fake support for the unsupportable.

TonyN
Reply to  co2isnotevil
May 21, 2020 8:46 am

Here is four-year-old ‘news’ about pink snow in the Arctic:

https://guff.com/pink-snow-is-falling-around-the-world-and-its-terrible-news-for-the-environment

tonyn
Reply to  co2isnotevil
May 21, 2020 8:52 am

Here is some four-year-old ‘news’ about pink snow in the Arctic:

https://guff.com/pink-snow-is-falling-around-the-world-and-its-terrible-news-for-the-environment

TonyN
Reply to  tonyn
May 21, 2020 8:54 am

Mods please delete: I got a 404 and sent a duplicate

Ron Long
May 20, 2020 10:13 am

OK, so I expect the University of Cambridge to colonize Antarctica, especially along the western side of the Peninsula. Here’s the name for their colony: Vikings II. What a hoot. Stay sane and safe (dogs wondering why no walk today…looks like they can’t count any better than U. Cambridge).

n.n
May 20, 2020 10:16 am

Eureka! Chaos (“evolution”), with, hopefully, an anthropogenic fitness function..

So, they believe it is climate change (i.e. uniform warming over a 30 year period), not anthropogenic, and not catastrophic, with a green, perhaps Green, future.

LdB
Reply to  n.n
May 21, 2020 4:25 am

Land walking krill coming up 🙂

John Tillman
May 20, 2020 10:16 am

Yet another expanding carbon sink! More likely from more CO2 than warmer T, if in fact happening.

John Tillman
May 20, 2020 10:19 am

How Green Was My Low-Lying Island.

Reply to  John Tillman
May 20, 2020 10:47 am

John Tillman
Reply to  David Middleton
May 20, 2020 2:02 pm

Those algae might be coal some day:

Ed Zuiderwijk
May 20, 2020 10:25 am

I must have overlooked the ‘unprededented’ somewhere.

May 20, 2020 10:30 am

If, as the article asserts, this is “the first ever large-scale map of microscopic algae as they bloomed across the surface of snow along the Antarctic Peninsula coast” then how can any conclusions be drawn as to what behavior the algae “bloom” has had, or will have in the future?

How is it possible to state “Results indicate that this ‘green snow’ is likely to spread as global temperatures increase”? Isn’t it possible that, as temperatures increase, there will be organisms that also “bloom” to consume this algae as a food source . . . this happens regularly in the world’s oceans . . . thereby limiting the algae’s geographic growth extent, or perhaps even reversing it?

And what might happen if increasing global temperatures force the nearby bird populations to go elsewhere, thereby depriving the snow algae of their needed “fertilizer source”?

KcTaz
Reply to  Gordon A. Dressler
May 20, 2020 12:07 pm

Indeed, how is it possible?
Did they forget this?

“Observing something for the first time, doesn’t mean it has never happened before.”

Chris Hanley
Reply to  KcTaz
May 20, 2020 2:46 pm

Indeed, on returning to Amsterdam in 1698 Willem de Vlamingh reported to the good burghers that in the Antipodes climate change was turning swans black.

Len Werner
Reply to  Chris Hanley
May 20, 2020 5:34 pm

Ahah!–is that the first time the term ‘Vlamingho’ was used? Except they are pink…

MarkW
Reply to  Gordon A. Dressler
May 20, 2020 12:34 pm

They also state that the total size of the blooms is only 1.9 sq kilometers.
How “large” scale can those maps be?

Reply to  MarkW
May 20, 2020 2:03 pm

At least will the map show individual algae…

Gary Pearse
Reply to  Gordon A. Dressler
May 20, 2020 5:39 pm

“Over 60% of blooms were found within five kilometres of a penguin colony.”

Errr … how did it get there? Pooping into an Antarctic gale? Was there any growing around and within the penguin colony? Why not? Real scientists don’t toss off thoughts as they pop into their heads.

Has anyone ever seen a climate science report that says, gee I guess this isn’t related to climate change after all as we thought it was. What are the odds that what one goes out to find is always found and that it is related to climate change and that the change is bad?

Remember the Ship of Fools study from The Centre for Excellence in Climate Science Research in Australia that got stuck in pack ice in mid summer searching for CAGW affects on Antarctica. They found it and the Project Leader got a big award for it?

No wonder 97% Cook was able to find 12,000 climate science papers published in peer reviewed journals over a decade! That’s the only startling thing about his study to my mind, thats 3 papers a day, every day! With 4 months ‘holidays and and weekends off work months, thats a 180 work days a year, so the pile of papers works out to 6 scientific papers a day published! S’Truth!

Latitude
May 20, 2020 10:33 am

this is where your grant money goes…

Results indicate that this ‘green snow’ is likely to spread as global temperatures increase.

Reply to  Latitude
May 20, 2020 11:09 am

Yellow snow has also reportedly been seen by researchers in some locations where it had not been before.

Reply to  gringojay
May 20, 2020 11:38 am

Cambridge researchers conclude:
“Don’t eat the yellow snow!”

PhotoPete
Reply to  ALLAN MACRAE
May 20, 2020 12:33 pm

Cool Frank Zappa tune…..

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  PhotoPete
May 20, 2020 8:06 pm

Frenchie likes it.

Willem69
Reply to  ALLAN MACRAE
May 20, 2020 4:13 pm

‘Watch out where the huskies go and don’t you eat that yellow snow’

I also seem to remember that there was an unfortunate incident between an eye and a yellow snow cone, i have to dig up the vinyl!

Stay sane,
Willem

Clyde Spencer
Reply to  Latitude
May 20, 2020 11:23 am

Latitude
What the ‘researchers’ are basically saying is that if the temperatures get above freezing, yellow snow will spontaneously turn into green snow. Who’d a thunk?

Carl Friis-Hansen
May 20, 2020 10:38 am

Nice 2011 article from The Guardian:
“When Antarctica was a tropical paradise ”
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/jul/17/antarctica-tropical-climate-co2-research

Excerpt from the article:
“Yet this icy vision turns out to be exceptional. For most of the past 100 million years, the south pole was a tropical paradise, it transpires.”

John Tillman
Reply to  Carl Friis-Hansen
May 20, 2020 1:38 pm

The WX there was never tropical in the past 100 million years. Its forests were boreal. Hard to be tropical in the land of the midnight sun. Got pretty warm under 24 daylight in summer, but tropical, no.

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  John Tillman
May 20, 2020 8:07 pm

I have a lot of respect for you, John, always love your comments. But, can’t we type the word “weather”? WX just sounds pretentious.

John Tillman
Reply to  Jeff Alberts
May 20, 2020 9:34 pm

Sorry. Long habit from aviation. Also on a phone, abbreviation is welcome.

Moderately Cross of East Anglia
May 20, 2020 10:40 am

They’ve discovered snot…big deal

HD Hoese
May 20, 2020 10:41 am

“The team found that the distribution of green snow algae is also strongly influenced by marine birds and mammals, whose excrement acts as a highly nutritious natural fertiliser to accelerate algal growth.” duh? Anybody remember guano? And El Niño? Nice to know about photosynthesis. Where are the ice worms, wrong hemisphere?

I saw this in 1973, shrimp were so thick that numerous rostrums stuck you when you waded and Powell, G. V, et al. 2010. Effects of seabird nesting colonies on algae and aquatic invertebrates in coastal waters. Marine Ecology Progress Series. 417:287-300. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/meps08791. They might cite this since it is in their millennium. There are earlier papers in the last one. Sorry kids, it’s getting harder to say that there is no such thing as a dumb question, etc.

TG McCoy
May 20, 2020 10:45 am

Isn’t the antarctic peninsula surrounded (or at least home to- several active under water volcanoes..
Nice source of heat and fertilizer..

May 20, 2020 10:52 am

Scientists have created the first ever large-scale map of microscopic algae as they bloomed across the surface of snow along the Antarctic Peninsula coast. Results indicate that this ‘green snow’ is likely to spread as global temperatures increase.

So if this is the first ever map, how do they know if it’s static, increasing of decreasing? Just because you’ve observed something for the first time doesn’t mean it hasn’t been there all along.

observa
Reply to  Steve Case
May 20, 2020 11:01 am

Well it’s like coral bleaching coming to attention with scuba diving in the 1980s on the GBR and then it’s worse than it was silly. Do keep up.

Ian Magness
May 20, 2020 11:03 am

They seem surprised (with the clear implication that this is the result of warming) that there is algae growing on the northern half of the Antarctic Peninsula and nearby islands. Fact – much of this area is north of the Antarctic Circle . If you look north to the Arctic Circle in Alaska and Canada and Russia, you find taiga and tundra, even fuller forests in places. So, what’s the big deal re plant life?
This follows a lot of rubbish talked about temperatures in the Peninsula in recent years with hysteria when (Fohn wind-induced) temperatures exceed 15C. Yet this is totally unsurprising given just how far north the northern half of the Peninsula is. It may be in “Antarctica” but the climate cannot be expected to be continuously “Antarctic” in the full frigid sense.

May 20, 2020 11:04 am

I miss a map of the green places…..

May 20, 2020 11:10 am

Growing weat there would be a justification for an alert, but algae over 3 month ??
😀 😀

bluecat57
May 20, 2020 11:30 am

Great! We need someplace new to settle and grow food.

May 20, 2020 11:46 am

Green is bad?

Gregory Woods
Reply to  Henry Pool
May 20, 2020 1:18 pm

Black is the new Green, as in The Black New Deal….

Farmer Ch E retired
May 20, 2020 11:50 am

Antarctica: 13,209,000 km2
Blooms of green algae: 1.9 km2

It must have been like looking for a needle in a haystack to find the green algae. When there is grant money, there is a way.

n.n
Reply to  Farmer Ch E retired
May 20, 2020 1:39 pm

It’s one small step for science. Another awkward leap for inference.

DHR
May 20, 2020 11:50 am

“Over 60% of blooms were found within five kilometres of a penguin colony. Algae were also observed growing near the nesting sites of other birds, including skuas, and areas where seals come ashore.”

Or it could be that birds and such choose to nest where temperatures are less-cold, just as the algae does. Which comes first?

Bruce Cobb
May 20, 2020 11:56 am

I’m assuming that the green snow is ok to eat.

ResourceGuy
May 20, 2020 12:31 pm

These will make great military bases for Russia and China……while the real targets of the climate crusades pay up with or without this outcome.

MarkW
May 20, 2020 12:32 pm

They haven’t actually measured this snow algae increasing in area, they just assume that it must be.

The algae currently covers less than 2 sq kilometers. If it doubles in size, it will cover another 2 sq kilometers.
That works out to what percentage of the size of Antarctica?

They note that the algae is only found near areas where birds nest.
This would mean that the only way for the size of the algae blooms to increase would be for the size of the bird colonies to also increase. Isn’t more life a good thing?
Beyond that, they claim that if Antarctica warms (another thing they assume, rather than measure) that the algae blooms will increase in size. However their own data shows that the algae blooms are only found near bird colonies. So aren’t they contradicting themselves?

old white guy
May 20, 2020 1:06 pm

I know I will not live long enough to see it but I sure would like to see 60 degree weather in Feb here in Ontario.

May 20, 2020 1:46 pm

….. well yes, you laypeople who aren’t scientists, you might think that they would have looked at the historical Antarctic temperatures first, but then never let actual data ruin a good hypothesis:

comment image?w=990&ssl=1

Who “peer” reviews this sh!te.

Reply to  philincalifornia
May 20, 2020 1:53 pm

…. and this; make some spaghetti. Actually 2013 -2019 is pretty interesting:

https://nsidc.org/arcticseaicenews/charctic-interactive-sea-ice-graph/

TomRude
May 20, 2020 3:11 pm

“Scientists have created the first ever large-scale map of microscopic algae as they bloomed across the surface of snow along the Antarctic Peninsula coast. Results indicate that this ‘green snow’ is likely to spread as global temperatures increase.”

The peninsula is the zone where increased advections of warm air converge while higher pressure catabatic winds descend from the continent.
comment image
comment image

To claim this has to do with global temperatures is dishonest and false.

Peter Hartley
May 20, 2020 3:46 pm

Like a lot of articles on biological processes that are supposed to be a marker of climate change they completely ignore the direct role of CO2 as a fertilizer for plant growth. I bet that a lab experiment would show that increased CO2 in the air allows this algae to grow better at current temperatures.

RoHa
May 20, 2020 7:25 pm

About 40% of Antarctica is Australian territory*, so if it warms up enough to be farm land, we’ll be OK.

(That’s what we say, anyway. And four countries agree.)

LdB
Reply to  RoHa
May 21, 2020 4:34 am

Between our oil rigs?

Jeff Alberts
May 20, 2020 8:08 pm

“Climate change will turn coastal Antarctica green, say scientists”

So? Why should I care?

LdB
Reply to  Jeff Alberts
May 21, 2020 4:35 am

Because there is a covid free cricket, soccer, football pitch just itching to be used 🙂

eck
May 20, 2020 9:00 pm

Didn’t one of the early Antarctic explorers report green algae? That’s what I remember.
So nothing new?

Cambo
May 20, 2020 9:04 pm

Perhaps another example of increased atmospheric CO2 helping the fauna of the planet.

David Blenkinsop
May 21, 2020 8:49 am

Here is a web article that describes the time period inferred for the first appearance of algae (like green algae on Earth), https://ucmp.berkeley.edu/precambrian/proterozoic.php
The time era in question was the Mesoproterozoic (1.6 to 1 billion years ago) era, part of the Proterozoic eon of time. It was during this time that we had “(an) explosion of eukaryotic forms. These included multicellular algae..”

So, one billion years ago or more for the emergence of green algae.

Face it, the stuff has been around *forever*. Just because someone decides to study something that doesn’t make it new!

By the way, is ‘green’ somehow universally a bad thing now, or what?

May 21, 2020 10:20 am

OMG! Antarctica turning green?!? It must be getting sick! Did it drink too much saltwater?

/sarc

Erich Schaffer
May 21, 2020 5:58 pm

Well, how about the climate starting to change there in the first place? So far Antarctica has been totally reluctant to warm up at all. And I am afraid, as long as we do not start to put a lot of contrails over Antarctica it is not going to change.