TY - JOUR
T1 - Emerging biological archives can reveal ecological and climatic change in Antarctica
AU - Strugnell, Jan M.
AU - McGregor, Helen
AU - Wilson, Nerida G.
AU - Meredith, Karina T.
AU - Chown, Steven L.
AU - Lau, Sally C. Y.
AU - Robinson, Sharon A.
AU - Saunders, Krystyna M.
PY - 2022/11
Y1 - 2022/11
N2 - Anthropogenic climate change is causing observable changes in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean including increased air and ocean temperatures, glacial melt leading to sea-level rise and a reduction in salinity, and changes to freshwater water availability on land. These changes impact local Antarctic ecosystems and the Earth's climate system. The Antarctic has experienced significant past environmental change, including cycles of glaciation over the Quaternary Period (the past similar to 2.6 million years), Understanding Antarctica's paleoecosystems, and the corresponding paleoenvironments and climates that have shaped them, provides insight into present day ecosystem change, and importantly, helps constrain model projections of future change. Biological archives such as extant moss beds and peat profiles, biological proxies in lake and marine sediments, vertebrate animal colonies, and extant terrestrial and benthic marine invertebrates, complement other Antarctic paleoclimate archives by recording the nature and rate of past ecological change, the paleoenvironmental drivers of that change, and constrain current ecosystem and climate models. These archives provide invaluable information about terrestrial ice-free areas, a key location for Antarctic biodiversity, and the continental margin which is important for understanding ice sheet dynamics. Recent significant advances in analytical techniques (e.g., genomics, biogeochemical analyses) have led to new applications and greater power in elucidating the environmental records contained within biological archives. Paleoecological and paleoclimate discoveries derived from biological archives, and integration with existing data from other paleoclimate data sources, will significantly expand our understanding of past, present, and future ecological change, alongside climate change, in a unique, globally significant region.
AB - Anthropogenic climate change is causing observable changes in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean including increased air and ocean temperatures, glacial melt leading to sea-level rise and a reduction in salinity, and changes to freshwater water availability on land. These changes impact local Antarctic ecosystems and the Earth's climate system. The Antarctic has experienced significant past environmental change, including cycles of glaciation over the Quaternary Period (the past similar to 2.6 million years), Understanding Antarctica's paleoecosystems, and the corresponding paleoenvironments and climates that have shaped them, provides insight into present day ecosystem change, and importantly, helps constrain model projections of future change. Biological archives such as extant moss beds and peat profiles, biological proxies in lake and marine sediments, vertebrate animal colonies, and extant terrestrial and benthic marine invertebrates, complement other Antarctic paleoclimate archives by recording the nature and rate of past ecological change, the paleoenvironmental drivers of that change, and constrain current ecosystem and climate models. These archives provide invaluable information about terrestrial ice-free areas, a key location for Antarctic biodiversity, and the continental margin which is important for understanding ice sheet dynamics. Recent significant advances in analytical techniques (e.g., genomics, biogeochemical analyses) have led to new applications and greater power in elucidating the environmental records contained within biological archives. Paleoecological and paleoclimate discoveries derived from biological archives, and integration with existing data from other paleoclimate data sources, will significantly expand our understanding of past, present, and future ecological change, alongside climate change, in a unique, globally significant region.
KW - benthos
KW - coalescent inference
KW - lake sediments
KW - mosses
KW - paleoecology
KW - peat
KW - sclerochronology
KW - Southern Ocean
KW - stable isotopes
KW - terrestrial invertebrate
KW - MAJOR DIATOM TAXA
KW - HEMISPHERE WESTERLY WINDS
KW - SOUTHERN-OCEAN SEDIMENTS
KW - ANIMAL-DERIVED NITROGEN
KW - LAST GLACIAL MAXIMUM
KW - SEA-ICE
KW - EAST ANTARCTICA
KW - LATERNULA-ELLIPTICA
KW - SURFACE-TEMPERATURE
KW - HOLOCENE VEGETATION
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85137459151&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/gcb.16356
DO - 10.1111/gcb.16356
M3 - Review article
C2 - 35900301
VL - 28
SP - 6483
EP - 6508
JO - Global Change Biology
JF - Global Change Biology
SN - 1354-1013
IS - 22
ER -