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interfering with the ability of a second of reproductive interference are


species to locate mates. This could still poorly understood. While some Primer
be the result of the one species calls reported cases may seem unlikely to
simply masking those of the other, have detectable effects on either the
or it could be that the calls confuse ecology or evolution of the species Antarctic marine
individuals of the second species and
cause them to approach heterospecific
involved, such as those occurring
between seals and penguins (Figure
biology
callers rather than those of their own 1), reproductive interference by
species. Such signal jamming can invasive species can contribute David K.A. Barnes
also occur within a sex. For instance, to the displacement of native and Andrew Clarke
among two species of Amazonian species. And, there is increasing
frog, there is selection for decreased evidence of reproductive character Antarctica is a continent of extremes:
sensitivity in male Allobates femoralis displacement the evolution of on average it is the highest, windiest,
to calls that fall within the range of differences in reproductive behaviour coldest and driest land mass
Epipedobates trivittatus calls in areas between species being driven onEarth. It also has the largest
where the two species overlap (Figure by reproductive interference, for ice-mass, with less than 1% of its
1). That way A. femoralis might avoid instance in damselflies. In addition, surface offering ice-free space for
interference resulting from the reproductive interference between biology. Biology in the Southern
overlapping frequency range of naturally co-occurring species may Ocean surrounding Antarctica is also
E. trivittatus calls. As these calls form have sufficient fitness effects to extreme in its isolation, light climate,
the basis of malemale communication influence habitat use. One obstacle water temperature and viscosity,
in these territorial frogs, responses to to determining the importance of continental shelf depth and, in the
E. trivittatus calls by A. femoralis males reproductive interference is that it has shallows, intense disturbance from
could represent both signal jamming often been studied as part of different scouring by icebergs. Being isolated
and heterospecific rivalry. evolutionary or ecological paradigms, and difficult of access, there are
e.g. hybridisation versus habitat use. large areas which have never been
But does reproductive interference Much like with other apparently sampled or even visited, and much
really happen that often? There is non-intuitive mating behaviours, such of the biology is very poorly known
evidence for reproductive interference as same-sex matings, the importance away from the proximity of research
in many species, particularly in of reproductive interference may well stations.
invasive and closely related species. lie in what it tells us about how and Athough there are a few similarities,
A recent review found 167 examples why organisms compete for mates, in general the contrast between life
of reproductive interference, excluding rather than as a consistently potent in Antarctica on land and in the sea is
studies of hybridization. Moreover, force of ecological or evolutionary amongst the strongest anywhere on
several types of reproductive change in its own right. Earth. Few higher taxa of organisms
interference can occur at the same occur in Antarcticas deserts or lakes,
time. For instance, when the two Where can I find out more? and those which do are tiny and
tick species Aponomma hydrosauri Amezquita, A., Hodl, W., Lima, A.P., Castellanos,
L., Erdtmann, L. and De Araujo, M.C. (2006).
have species richness levels which
and Amblyomma albolimbatum were Masking interference and the evolution would be dwarfed by any small island
present on the same host reptile three of the acoustic communication system in elsewhere. By contrast, in the marine
the Amazonian Dendrobatid frog Allobates
forms of reproductive interference femoralis. Evolution 60, 18741887. environment, just 30 minutes using
were recorded. First the mixing of Andrews, R.H., Petney, T.N. and Bull, C.M. (1982). SCUBA (diving using Self Contained
female pheromones jams signals. Reproductive Interference between three
parapatric species of reptile tick. Oecologia
Underwater Breathing Apparatus)
Normally these pheromones cause 52, 281286. or a remote operated camera can
males to cease feeding and search de Bruyn, P.J.N., Tosh, C.A., and Bester, M.N. reveal representatives of half of all
(2008). Sexual harassment of a king penguin by
for females, but when females of an Antarctic fur seal. J. Ethol. 26, 295297. known animal phyla. Ectotherms
both species were present males no Dame, E. A. and K. Petren (2006). Behavioural have had to adapt to very low, but
longer responded. Second, males mechanisms of invasion and displacement in
Pacific island geckos (Hemidactylus). Anim.
stable temperatures, whereas most
attempt to court females of the other Behav. 71, 11651173. endotherms leave the polar regions in
species and thus spent less time Grning, J. and Hochkirch, A. (2008). Reproductive winter. Animals on the seabed (Figure 1)
interference between animal species. Quart.
courting and mating with females of Rev. Biol. 83, 257282. live life in the slow lane, exhibiting
their own species. Third, when Mallet, J. (2005). Hybridization as an invasion of some of the slowest development
A. albolimbatum males attempted to the genome. Trends Ecol. Evol. 20, 229237.
McLain, D.K. and Pratt, A.E. (1999). The cost of
and growth times known. The water
mate (unsuccessfully) with sexual coercion and heterospecific sexual column contrasts with both life on
A. hydrosauri females, they harassment on the fecundity of a host-specific, land and on the seabed, as although
seed-eating insect (Neacoryphus bicrucis).
remained attached to the females Behav. Ecol. Sociobiol. 46, 164170. species-poor it is very productive
ventral surface, preventing access McLain, D.K. and Shure, D.J. (1987). in summer. It also includes some
to her genitals for conspecific Pseudocompetition - Interspecific
displacement of insect species through
of the most numerous and largest
males. misdirected courtship. Oikos 49, 291296. macroscopic life on the planet.
History has played a dominant role
So how important is reproductive in the explanation of why Antarcticas
School of Biology, University of St Andrews,
interference? Despite the growing Harold Mitchell Building, St Andrews, land, fresh-water, littoral and marine
body of empirical examples, the Fife KY16 9TH, UK. life is as it is. The most important
ecological and evolutionary effects *E-mail: erb28@st-andrews.ac.uk factor has been the gradual long-term
Current Biology Vol 21 No 12
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James Ross Islands, which afford


a window into Antarctic marine
biological history for a few isolated
points in time. To supplement this
meagre information, however, we
can use information on the current
distributions of species, together
with the rapidly developing field
of molecular phylogeography (for
example, the geographic variation of
haplotype networks within a species)
to infer faunal evolutionary history.

A seasonally productive water


column
In the Southern Ocean, some physical
conditions (for example, temperature)
are as stable as anywhere on Earth,
matching the deep sea. Much of the
physical variability that does occur is
highly predictable seasonally; thus,
the light climate and solar energy
input are set by latitude. However,
the environment is cyclical, across
time-scales ranging from tens
of thousands of years (driven
byplanetary orbital variation) to
quasi-decadal (for example,the
Southern Annular Mode the
dominant mode of extra-tropical
climate variability in the Southern
Hemisphere, characterised by an
oscillation in surface atmospheric
pressure between high and lower
latitudes). On very short time-scales,
however, the surface marine
environment can be highly variable,
as storms and other weather features
move through. Sea-ice is the most
obvious feature of the sea surface,
and this doubles in area in winter.
Although apparently barren when
viewed from the surface, sea-ice
supports an extensive and complex
ecosystem. Considerable productivity
Figure 1. Characteristic elements of the Antarctic marine fauna. occurs within layers or pore chambers
Hard surfaces covered by sessile suspension feeders, such as brachiopods (A) and slow moving in sea-ice, as well as on the underside
predators such as sea-stars (C). Water column biomass is dominated by krill (B) and copepods
(D). Fish are mainly demersal and show unique adaptation, such as no haemoglobin in the ice-
of the sea-ice, and many species have
fish (E). Unlike elsewhere, most of the predators are not durophagus (crushing), such as the sea to tolerate quite extreme conditions
spiders (F) and nemerteans (G), which also illustrate gigantism (through raised dissolved oxygen of temperature, salinity and nutrient
content of cold water). We thank Jamie Oliver for help making this figure. concentration.
The peak of primary production
cooling over the last 60 million years, fauna. The high energy conditions by phytoplankton is subsurface and
steepened by the Azolla event in the at high latitudes are not ideal for spatially patchy; it can be intense
Arctic. However, the geographic and fossilisation, and most fossil deposits at more than 200 g C m2 close to
oceanographic isolation (driven by that do exist on land are buried under or over shelf areas, and the bloom
plate tectonics and the initiation of ice sheets. Furthermore, the scouring is highly seasonal. Southern Ocean
the Antarctic Circumpolar Current) of nearly all of the land and much surface waters can thus switch
and the cyclical major glaciations of the Antarctic continental shelf by rapidly between being thick with algal
over the last few million years have the advance of ice sheets at glacial blooms to being the clearest waters
also played important roles. Unlike maxima (the peaks of ice ages) will in the world; the record for oceanic
at lower latitudes, there is sadly have destroyed much of the fossil water transparency, measured by
little direct fossil information on the evidence. Nevertheless there are a Secchi disk, comes from the Weddell
evolution of the Antarctic marine few places, such as Seymour and Sea (80 m, measured on October
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R453

13, 1986). The intensity of summer populations. This structure is perhaps from food, much of which is recycled
production is a major reason why surprising given that krill are moved in the water column as it sinks to the
this area, comprising just 10% of huge distances by the powerful seabed.
the global ocean, is responsible Antarctic Circumpolar Current. Ecologists have long been
for~20% of CO2 draw-down. There Perhaps the most striking feature of intrigued as to whether the extreme
are many species of algae involved the water column biota of the Southern physical conditions of the polar
and the composition of blooms vary Ocean is the paucity and low diversity oceans, the unusual nature of the
with water mass and with proximity of fish. A few groups, most notably Antarctic continental shelf and/or its
to oceanic fronts or the seasonal the notothenoids, have radiated in isolation by the Antarctic Circumpolar
sea-ice margin. In consequence, Antarctica but many taxa and guilds Current have resulted in a fauna
the composition of phytoplankton familiar from lower latitudes are that differs from that elsewhere.
preserved in sediment cores has completely absent. The notothenioids The Southern Ocean is the only
proved to be a valuable tool for dominate biomass and diversity marine region in which sharks and
investigating historical variation in on the continental shelves around turtles are absent, and likewise
oceanography, such as where and Antarctica. They are a predominantly there are benthic groups which are
how far fronts move northwards benthic group, having evolved form an absent (for example, brachyuran
during ice-ages. ancestor that had lost the function of crabs) or very rare (such as acorn
The phytoplankton biomass is the swimbladder. They tend to be slow barnacles, rays and reptant decapod
dominated by large diatom species, moving, and relatively few species have crustaceans). However, the benthos
though some areas can be dominated evolved the ability to live in the water is just as remarkable for those
by Phaeocystis and many consumers column. Their physiology has attracted groups that are well represented;
may target the smaller ciliates and a great deal of attention, particularly pycnogona (sea spiders), peracarids
flagellates (nano-phytoplankton) or in relation to freezing resistance and (amphipods and isopods) and
bacteria (picophytoplankton). The metabolism. Because teleost (bony) bryozoans are all unusually rich
interaction and lag between physical fish have blood that is more dilute than and abundant. In common with
variability and changes in primary seawater, they run the risk of freezing most isolated regions,most
production has been a key area of in very cold polar waters. Freezing of these species appear to be
research, particularly with respect is prevented by the presence of a endemic. Debate continues
to its trophic cascade effect on glycoprotein antifreeze; this prevents as to which factors havebeen
zooplankton and their high predators. small ice crystals from growing to a most important inproducing
The fate of most primary production dangerous size, though how the fish this diverse and unusualfauna.
in the Southern Ocean is to be broken clears this ice from its system is still an Recent suggestions include lack of
down by bacteria and protists in the area of active research. One group of predators able to crush skeletons,
microbial web, and new molecular notothenioids, the ice-fish, no longer the unusuallysediment-free water
approaches are revealing huge express the genes for haemoglobin column, to which can be added the
and previously unrealised bacterial (and often myoglobin) and so their long-running theme of history.
biodiversity. A second important blood is clear and translucent. At the More than 9700 species are
route for algal productivity in the low temperatures of polar waters these described from the Southern Ocean,
Southern Ocean is consumption by fish can carry sufficient oxygen for most of which are benthos, but we
the most numerous large animals in metabolism in simple solution. Most know much less about them than
the world: Antarctic krill (Euphausia Antarctic fish grow slowly and do the pelagos (Figure 2). It had long
superba) and calanoid copepods. not reach maturation for many years, been thought that species richness
Krill can form swarms more than a making them highly vulnerable to in general declined pole-wards. This
km long; they grow through a series harvesting. Although compared with is clearly the case on land and in
of moult stages to reach more than elsewhere Southern Ocean fisheries freshwater, but although it is true for
five centimetres in length and annual have been fairly small scale, targeted macro-algae and a few animal groups
production is estimated to be 340540 populations have still not recovered (notably gastropod molluscs) in the
million tonnes. Zooplankton, and decades later. sea, other marine taxa are as rich
especially krill, are the key prey for or richer than at low latitudes (for
most of the worlds penguins and A deep but diverse sea-bed example, holothurian sea cucumbers
baleen whales, as well as many fish, Water column-seabed interactions or ascidian sea squirts). The diverse
squid, seabirds and seals. Krill is also (benthopelagic coupling) may be Antarctic seabed thus contrasts with
the target of a substantial fishery, at its weakest in high latitudes. patterns on land, freshwater and in
and so understanding its population This is because the vast icesheet the water column, and indeed it is
dynamics has long been seen as a on the continent of Antarctica has comparable in diversity across all
priority for science and conservation depressed the shelf so it is deeper taxonomic levels with all but coral
in the region. Recent genetic than elsewhere, and together with reef ecosystems. For example, more
studies have shown that clock the scouring of the shelf by previous than 1200 species are known from
genes genes for components of extensions of the ice sheet at the South Orkney Islands and nearly
the molecular machinery controlling glacial maxima this has resulted in 2000 around South Georgia. The
circadian rhythms control moulting a continental shelf much deeper number of known benthic species
and diel migration, and other work than the photic zone of primary has near doubled in the last decade,
has suggested that there is weak but production. In consequence, benthic partly as a result of particularly
significant geographic structure to primary consumers are further away intense multinational efforts during
Current Biology Vol 21 No 12
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the Census of Antarctic Marine Life A 30W


0 0 1000 2000
B
30W 0 0 1000 2000

and International Polar Year (even Kilometres Kilometres

50
50
areas as big as the Amundsen Sea,

S
S
which is 40 longitude wide, were

60
60

S
S
only first sampled in 2008) but also 60E 60E

because of the rising evidence of


70
West Antarctic warming. S

70
S
The Southern Ocean has been

80

80
claimed to be the most isolated of

S
any large marine area because it 90W 90E 90W 90E

is surrounded by the fastest jet of


the Antarctic Circumpolar Current,
the Polar Front, which acts as a 120W 120W

strong barrier. This barrier is not, 120E 120E


however, absolute and its strength
and porosity varies with depth and
150W 180 150E 150W 180 150E
geography; moreover meso-scale
eddies continually spin off north and C 100
south, carrying organisms both in and Species description published
out of Antarctica. Recently, molecular In open access database
Percent described marine species

genetic techniques have shown that 80


in the Southern Ocean to 2010

some species genuinely do have


distributions that cross this front,
but most that appear to do so are 60
actually separate but cryptic species.
Unlike anywhere else, isolated or
not, there are no confirmed reports 40
of non-indigenous fauna established
in the Southern Ocean (though
several non-indigenous algae occur
20
at Deception Island and single life
stages of some non-indigenous
crustaceans and a mollusc have been
0
reported).
1760 1800 1840 1880 1920 1960 2000
One aspect of ecology that has a
Year
significant impact on dispersal ability Current Biology
is the mode of reproduction. Thorson,
Mileikovsky and other pioneering Figure 2. Biologically sampled area of the southern polar seabed.
biologists long ago suggested that, The area of the southern polar seabed which has been biologically sampled (A, red boxes show
benthos data) is much lower than that for the water column (B, blue boxes show data for pela-
in polar regions, the reproduction
gos). Southern Ocean species description and addition to open access databases with time (C).
mode tended away from production Data from http://www.SCAR-MarBIN.be. We thank Huw Griffiths for help making this figure.
of planktonic larvae. This is
supportedby the success in polar would isolate benthos from their even scientist lifespan time scales.
regions of many taxa which are food supply in the photic zone by However, they may be important
obligate brooders or undergo direct considerable distances, and make canaries of global climate change,
development (that is, they lack a possession of feeding larvae a as most species that have been
free-living larval stage entirely), strong disadvantage. However, experimentally measured have
but also by anomalously few far-ranging planktotrophic larvae proved to be highly sensitive to
molluscs or echinoids (sea urchins) could recolonise the shelf more easily small changes in temperature. Whilst
with planktonic larvae. However, as ice sheets retreated between the Southern Ocean is typically
plankton tow samples have revealed glaciations. associated with endotherm giants
that though fewer species have Antarctic benthic organisms are (Fin and Blue whales, but also the
planktotrophic (feeding) larvae at high unusual in ecophysiology, with largest of flying birds, the wandering
latitude, many have lecithotrophic reduced oxygen use (metabolism), albatross) it also has gigantic
larvae (non-feeding planktonic larvae development, growth, activity and invertebrates, notably arthropods.
with yolk-sacs). One interesting meal processing times an order of The maximum size of percarids and
ecological aspect of this broad magnitude slower than ecologically pycnogona has been correlated
pattern is that the few species that equivalent species elsewhere. with high levels of dissolved oxygen
do reproduce via planktotrophic Predation of limpets by nemertean (cold water holds more gas) but
larvae are extremely abundant in worms can only be visualised by selective pressures in some groups
the shallows, suggesting differential recording on film and playing-back (for example, bivalve molluscs) have
survival during glaciations and at an hour a minute. This makes led to the evolution of mainly very
interglacials. Ice-sheets grounded on experimental and manipulative work small species. In the shallows, many
most of the shelf during glaciations very difficult for on grant, PhD and animals are small because they are
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juveniles or young; communities are A considerable literature has already Rising surface temperatures have
in various stages of recovery from been built up on ectotherm responses also led to much speculation about
scouring by icebergs. Most can to acutely raised acidification through invasions of the Antarctic continental
recruit from deeper water as Antarctic laboratory experimental manipulations shelf by non-indigenous species or
benthos occur across unusually wide on various life history stages of a anomuran (stone) crabs from deeper
depth ranges (eurybathy), a feature range of Antarctic taxa. These suggest water with consequent changes
which may be related to previous differing degrees of tolerance (that is, to assemblage structure or even
extensions of the ice sheet driving the ability to maintain shell thickness), extinctions of native fauna. Whilst
many species off the shelf and in to but the extent to which any individual such speculation has attracted
deeper water. species will cope through tolerance, considerable attention, hard evidence
Many benthic species recorded as against adaptation or migration, is of actual biological change with
from the shallows have ranges unknown and hard to test over realistic a clear causal link to changes in
beyond the shelf break at 800 m and time scales. One of the key problems climate is essentially confined
down the continental slope. Very little of assessing in situ biological response to changes in the distribution of
is known about the biology of the to acidification is the paucity of historic phytoplankton and sea-bird (mainly
continental slope and deep sea, even measurements of pH, something which penguin) distribution. Thus, even
in the best-studied regions such as is now being addressed by examination in an area experiencing one of the
the Weddell Sea, although a recent of museum specimens with skeletons fastest rates of regional climate
series of scientific cruises (Antarctic of differing carbonate structure. change, and despite considerable
Deep sea or ANDEEP) have shown Much experimental work has international marine biological effort,
that some groups, notably isopods, also been directed at the response the biological response to physical
are unusually rich here. Whether most of nearshore benthos to acute change is not yet clear. We suggest
abyssal species are rare or intensely temperature rises, showing that many that impacts are most likely to be
patchy has become a source of common species in the shallows are detected near research stations
debate, as has been the scalability unable to perform critical activities in the shallower waters of the
of richness estimates (that is, how following increases of just 23C. As Bellingshausen and Scotia shelves.
valid is it to scale up from the results with studies of the acute response These will probably involve one or
of a few samples to the deep-sea to acidification, it is difficult to more of the first detection of range
environment as a whole?). Except assess relevance of short-term shifts in the more sensitive species,
for meiofauna, only in the last few studies to understanding the increased growth by suspension
years has sampling protocol in deep long-term responses to environmental feeders, differential survival across
waters started to become designed change. Arguably many of the most age spectra of well monitored
more critically to increase statistical likely marine biological responses species, arrivals of non-indigenous
power. The last decade has marked will be through altered community species, and increased ice-scour
a step change in the development of interactions, but in situ study of this disturbance in the shallows (as
collecting, describing and databasing is greatly complicated by iceberg reduced periods of winter fast ice
deep biodiversity, but the drivers activity, slow growth and community allow ice bergs to move around
of Antarctic abyssal biodiversity development, and taxonomic more).
remain obscure. Elucidating these resolution.
may be crucial to reconstructing One consequence of the Marine biology as a tool to interpret
and understanding Antarcticas widespread retreat of glaciers and wider science questions
past and will require closer linkage ice-shelves is that phytoplankton Historically marine biology
across disciplines, as has happened blooms now occur in areas previously in Antarctica has benefitted
during the latest exploration visits covered by shelf ice, and also greatly from synergy with other
to cold seep and hydrothermal vent further south where the duration disciplines, particularly geology and
communities in Antarctica. of winter sea ice has shortened. oceanography, but also geography,
Oceanographic changes to the west glaciology and meteorology, all of
Marine biological response to of the Antarctic Peninsula have also which provide valuable context for
physical change affected higher levels in the food- the interpretation of biological data.
The ocean to the west of the Antarctic web. A decrease in krill biomass A multidisciplinary approach to the
Peninsula is warming, and projections and a concurrent increase in salps testing of biological hypotheses is
from global models suggest that over the last few decades has been now widespread, but in recent years
this will be amongst the first places reported, though links to climate biological data have proved critical
to become under-saturated first in change remain speculative. More to other disciplines. This is because
aragonite and then in calcite; in other clearly linked to warming have been it can provide data where there are
words, this is a likely hotspot of ocean marked changes in the distribution otherwise little or none, or it can
acidification. Measurements to date of penguin breeding colonies, with provide improved spatial or temporal
already show that near surface waters populations of the ice-associated resolution.
of the Bellingshausen and Scotia seas Adlie penguin having decreased Perhaps the best recent example
have warmed as fast as anywhere in towards the north of their range and has been the use of biological
the last 50 years, and that the highest increased at more southerly locations distributions to refine models of ice
rate of glacier retreat, ice shelf and and an associated shift southwards sheet behaviour under past climate
sea ice losses are along the Antarctic of the related Gentoo and Chinstrap variation. Ice cores provide a high
Peninsula. penguins. resolution record of past atmospheric
Current Biology Vol 21 No 12
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A second example of this synergy


comes from the modelling of the
impacts of regional climate change.
Organisms are now seen as one of
the best sources of high resolution
records of past pH and temperature.
Whilst the change in pH of the
Southern Ocean suggests increasing
difficulty for calcifying organisms,
the increase in both oceanic
temperature and the spatial extent of
phytoplankton blooms may enable
benthos to grow more rapidly. The
use of historical archived samples
has already pointed to such changes,
and this synergy between biology
and oceanography promises to lead
to significantly refined predictions
concerning the impact of climate
change on the Southern Ocean
biota. And in turn this should lead to
an improved understanding of the
impact of global change on the biota
of the worlds oceans.

Concluding remarks
Marine biology was one of the
earliest scientific disciplines to be
undertaken in Antarctica. Whilst
this led to a rapid improvement in
our understanding of the Southern
Ocean and its biota, it also led to an
explosion of resource harvesting.
Early exploitationfocussedon
whales and seals, but since the
1960s there have also been finfish
and krill fisheries. The Antarctic
Figure 3. Schematics of Antarctica, the Southern ocean sea-floor and ice extent now and as also has a long and distinguished
hypothesised in one of the last interglacial periods. history of fundamentalresearch on
The huge ice sheets weigh down Antarctica and its surrounding continental shelf (yellow), many of these exploited species,
making it the deepest (as well as the widest) globally. Geological and biological data suggest research which has not only given
species in the Weddell and Ross Sea, which are separated by the West Antarctic Ice sheet,
were connected perhaps as recently as 120,000 years ago. Studying signals of connectivity
us fundamental insights into their
in species of the region could help reconstruct ice sheet behaviour during historic periods of population dynamics and the
warming and thus more accurately model future sea level change. We thank Peter Fretwell for relationship of these dynamics to
help making this figure. large-scale oceanographic and
atmospheric phenomena such as
temperature and composition but on nearly all shelf. However, recent Southern Annular Mode and the El
these data are spatially limited. careful biogeographic work has Nio Southern Oscillation (ENSO),
Glaciologists and geographers have suggested that the Weddell and but also provided the first signals
mapped ice sheet topography and Ross seas, on either side of the West ofpopulation decline (for example,
thickness and can determine ice Antarctic ice sheet, were connected inmany seabirds which were
thinning patterns and the topography recently. Such a marine connection caughtas by-catch in fisheries,
of underlying bedrock to reveal likely suggests a partial collapse of the both within the Southern Ocean and
paths of weakness and instability. thirdlargest ice mass on Earth elsewhere).
However, recent work on the genetics (Figure3). This important synergy For decades, biological effort was
and distributions of terrestrial biota between biological and earth sciences largely confined to major expeditions
has shown clearly that some land is being further used to help elucidate or the immediate environs of research
has remained ice-free; this then the pathand extent of the seaways stations serviced by ship. However,
constrains model reconstructions of and their timing, which should give the development of permanent
past ice-sheet size and distribution. strong clues to West Antarctic ice stations with air-bridges, and
On the continental shelf, studies of sheet behaviour in past interglacial the greater use of new sampling
ice scouring lines, moraines and periods and how global sea level is techniques such as SCUBA and
sediments suggest that at the last likely to change under current and remotely operated vehicles have
glacial maximum, ice sheets grounded projecting warming. greatly increased both the spreads
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and resolution of marine biological


work in Antarctica. In the last
Essay
decade there has been a significant
shift in approach, with sampling
increasingly targeted at answering Could Scott have survived with todays
specific questions, improved
synergy with other disciplines, and a
physiological knowledge?
widespread application of molecular
technology. This has been driven by In 1911, members of a British expedition walked across the Antarctic to the
the recognition that rapid regional South Pole, but in the punishingly hostile environment, retracing their steps
warming was inducing striking back to the edge of the continent proved fatal. Over the last 100 years,
changes in the environment, and the knowledge about human physiology has greatly increased and, on the
awareness that change in Antarctica centenary of this most extreme of all journeys, this essay explores the true
had a truly global impact. Marine extent of the physiological stress experienced by the men involved and whether
biology has recently become a key their fate was inevitable.
tool in understanding change in
carbon cycling, the reconstruction Lewis George Halsey1* over months would trigger noteworthy
of Antarcticas glacial history and and Mike Adrian Stroud2 physiological adaptations to help
thereby in predicting potential ice them cope, but it is now recognised
sheet behaviour and consequent One hundred years ago, Captain that this does not happen. As a
sea level rise. Marine biological work Robert Falcon Scott set out across consequence of our African ancestry,
in Antarctica has much to do, and the Ross ice shelf in the Antarctic mankind is primarilyadapted to
remains an important aspect of trying hoping to be the first person in history heat exposure, and responses to the
to understand the world we live in to reach the South Pole. He was cold are not only relatively ineffective
and how it will change in the future. travelling on foot. Although his team [1] but can be counterproductive for
of five men succeeded in crossing man-hauling expeditions. For
Further reading the 900 miles from the edge of the example, alongsideshivering
Atkinson, A., Siegel, V., Pakhomov, E., and continent to 90 latitude, man-hauling to generate moreheat, the
Rothery, P. (2004). Long-term decline in
krill stock and increase in salps within the their sledges carrying food and body increases insulation by
Southern Ocean. Nature 432, 100103. equipment for most of the trip and vasoconstriction of blood vessels
Aronson, R.B., Moody, R.M., Ivany, L.C., Blake,
D.B., Werner, J.E. and Glass, A. (2009).
conducting valuable science en route, primarily in the skin, such that less
Climate Change and Trophic Response of the they died on the return journey. A heat is transported by the blood to
Antarctic Bottom Fauna. PLoS ONE 4, e4385. century on, there is still controversy body extremities and lost. However,
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0004385.
Barnes, D.K.A., and Hillenbrand, C.-D. (2010). about how much Scott (Figure 1) the increase in insulation from this
Faunal evidence for a late quaternary was at fault, although in 1910 there response is less than that provided by
trans-Antarctic seaway. Glob. Change Biol.
16, 32973303.
was considerable ignorance about wearing a typical business suit, and
Brandt, A., Gooday, A.J., Brando, S.N., Brix, S., the physiological stresses caused the marked reductions in blood flow to
Brkeland, W., Cedhagen, T., Choudhury, M., by Antarctic extremes. Accepting the extremities considerably increase
Cornelius, N., Danis, B., De Mesel, I., et al.
(2007). First insights into the biodiversity and the limitations of the technologies
biogeography of the Southern Ocean deep he took on the expedition, today
sea. Nature 447, 307311.
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we can use our greatly advanced
biodiversity What do we know about the understanding of the human condition
distribution of life in the southern ocean? to assess the major physiological
PLoS ONE 5(8), e11683.
Gutt, J., and Piepenburg, D. (2003). stressors that Scott endured and
Scale-dependent impact on diversity of the tricks he missed to limit them.
Antarctic benthos caused by grounding of
icebergs. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 253, 7783.
In celebrating this centenary
Janosik, A.M., and Halanych, K.M. (2010). and the vast developmentin
Unrecognized Antarctic biodiversity: a case physiological knowledge accrued
study with Odontaster (Odontasteridae;
Asteroidea). Integr. Comp. Biol. 50, 981992. since the HeroicAge of Antarctic
Rogers, A.D., Murphy, E., Clarke, A., and exploration,we ask whether, with
Johnston, N. (2007). Antarctic ecology: from
genes to ecosystems. Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc.
this modern insight, Scotts team
362, parts 1 and 2. couldhave survived their epic journey.
Schiaparelli, S., and Hopcroft, R.R. (2011). Census Antarctica is a desolate landscape.
of antarctic marine life: Diversity and change
in the southern ocean ecosystems. Deep Sea Temperatures there are usually below
Res. II 58, 1276. 0C and regularly as low as 70C,
Thomas, D.N. (2004). Frozen Oceans. (London:
Natural History Museum).
exacerbated by very strong katabatic
Trivelpiece, W.Z., Hinke, J.T., Miller, A.K., Reiss, (downslope) winds, and there is
C.S., Trivelpiece, S.G., and Watters, G.M. little vegetation or animal matter for
(2011). Variability in krill biomass links
harvesting and climate warming to penguin food. This explains why Antarctica is
population changes in Antarctica. Proc. Natl. the sole continent not permanently
Acad. Sci. USA 108, 76257628.
inhabited by people, and terrestrial Figure 1. Captain Scott, 1911.
British Antarctic Survey, NERC, Madingley travel there is incredibly demanding. Photograph by Herbert Ponting. Reproduced
Road, Cambridge, CB3 0ET, UK. Early Antarctic explorers hoped with permission of the Scott Polar Research
E-mail: dkab@bas.ac.uk that exposure to a cold environment Institute, University of Cambridge.

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