The survey, focusing on mosses, lichens, and algae, utilized a European Space Agency satellite alongside several summer seasons of field measurements. This study identified nearly 45 square kilometers of vegetation, an area approximately three times the size of Lake Windermere in the UK.
Led by the University of Edinburgh in collaboration with the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, British Antarctic Survey, and Scottish Association for Marine Science, the international research team discovered that over 80 percent of the vegetation is located within the Antarctic Peninsula and nearby islands.
This vegetation represents just 0.12 percent of Antarctica's total ice-free area, underscoring the necessity of protecting these crucial zones under the current Antarctic Specially Protected Area (ASPA) system, researchers noted.
Antarctica's plant life, primarily mosses and lichens, has adapted to endure the extreme polar environment, playing significant roles in local carbon and nutrient cycling. Previously, the extent and distribution of these plants across the continent were largely unknown.
"Antarctica's vegetative species, due to their environmental sensitivity, serve as excellent indicators of regional climate change. Monitoring these plants in such a pristine environment can provide insights into how similar species might respond in other vulnerable ecosystems worldwide, such as the Arctic," experts explained.
Charlotte Walshaw, PhD researcher from the School of GeoSciences at the University of Edinburgh and lead author of the study, remarked, "Our continent-scale map provides key information on vegetation presence in areas that are rarely visited by people. This will have profound implications for our understanding of where vegetation is located across the continent, and what factors influence this distribution."
Dr. Claudia Colesie, researcher at the University of Edinburgh's School of GeoSciences, added, "Lichens and mosses in Antarctica encounter the harshest living conditions on the planet on a daily basis. Only the most resilient organisms can thrive there. Now that we know where to look for them, we can provide more targeted conservation measures to safeguard their future."
Dr. Andrew Gray, researcher at the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research and co-lead of the study, commented, "Remote sensing approaches such as this are low impact methods to study Antarctica's fragile ecosystem as well as monitor change to its vegetation in the future."
Research Report:A satellite-derived baseline of photosynthetic life across Antarctica
Related Links
University of Edinburgh
Beyond the Ice Age
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