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Benthic fauna declined on a whitening Antarctic continental shelf

Earth Sciences

Benthic fauna declined on a whitening Antarctic continental shelf

S. E. A. Pineda-metz, D. Gerdes, et al.

Discover how rising sea ice in the Antarctic has transformed undersea life! Research by Santiago E. A. Pineda-Metz, Dieter Gerdes, and Claudio Richter uncovers significant shifts in benthic communities, revealing the vital connections between climate change and marine biodiversity in this pristine region.... show more
Abstract
Ice retreat in West Antarctica and Antarctic Peninsula has led to important changes in seafloor communities and gains in benthic blue carbon. In most of the Antarctic, however, sea ice increased between the 1970s and 2014, but its effects on the benthos remain largely unexplored. Here, we provide a 1988–2014 record of macro- and megafauna from the northeastern Weddell Sea shelf, where benthic biomass decreased by two thirds and composition shifted from suspension feeders to deposit feeders. Concomitant increases in sea-ice cover suggest a reduced flux of primary production to the benthos. As benthic communities are major repositories for Antarctic biodiversity and play an important role in biogeochemical cycling, the observed changes have far-reaching consequences for the Antarctic ecosystem and its feedback to the climate system. The findings underscore the importance of long-term ecological monitoring in a region vulnerable to warming and ice-shelf collapse.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
May 06, 2020
Authors
Santiago E. A. Pineda-Metz, Dieter Gerdes, Claudio Richter
Tags
Antarctica
benthic communities
sea ice
biodiversity
climate change
biogeochemical cycling
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