Centre for Sustainable Tropical Fisheries and Aquaculture and College of Science and Engineering, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia.
Securing Antarctica's Environmental Future, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia.
Glob Chang Biol. 2022 Nov;28(22):6483-6508. doi: 10.1111/gcb.16356. Epub 2022 Sep 8.
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 ~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.
人为气候变化正在导致南极洲和南大洋发生可观测的变化,包括空气和海洋温度升高、冰川融化导致海平面上升和盐度降低,以及陆地淡水资源可用性的变化。这些变化影响当地的南极生态系统和地球的气候系统。南极洲经历了显著的过去环境变化,包括第四纪(过去约 260 万年)的冰川旋回。了解南极洲的古生态系统,以及塑造它们的相应古环境和气候,提供了对当今生态系统变化的深入了解,重要的是,有助于限制对未来变化的模型预测。生物档案,如现存的苔藓床和泥炭剖面、湖泊和海洋沉积物中的生物代用指标、脊椎动物动物群,以及现存的陆地和底栖海洋无脊椎动物,通过记录过去生态变化的性质和速度、导致这种变化的古环境驱动因素,以及限制当前生态系统和气候模型,补充了其他南极古气候档案。这些档案提供了关于无冰陆地的宝贵信息,无冰陆地是南极生物多样性的关键所在地,也是理解冰盖动态的重要区域。分析技术的最新重大进展(例如基因组学、生物地球化学分析)为阐明生物档案中包含的环境记录提供了新的应用和更大的能力。从生物档案中获得的古生态学和古气候发现,以及与其他古气候数据源的现有数据的整合,将极大地扩展我们对过去、现在和未来生态变化的理解,以及气候变化,在一个独特的、具有全球重要性的地区。