Sunday, October 27, 2013

Antarctic researchers focus on penguin poo

AFP-JIJI
Ancient penguin droppings and the impact of global warming on the Antarctic food chain are the focus of Australia’s latest scientific mission to the icy continent, which departed Oct. 15. The icebreaker Aurora Australis set off from Hobart with a research team and some 600 tons of cargo for its annual mission this Antarctic summer.

Researchers from the government’s Australian Antarctic Division said that they would have two major focuses, exploring the historical feeding habits of Adelie penguins, and impacts of ocean acidification on phytoplankton and bacteria, the smallest building blocks of the southern continent’s ecosystem.

Seabird expert Barbara Wienecke will lead an archaelogical survey of abandoned penguin sites, excavating ancient droppings to determine how their diets have changed over time and what implications that could have for the management of Southern Ocean fisheries. “We will be digging down into the old soils formed from bird waste and looking for the remains of prey, such as fish ear-bones and squid beaks,” said Wienecke. “It is the first time this type of work has been done in the Davis region and we are hopeful of finding out whether Adelie diets changed in the past, for example, from krill to fish-based diets,” she added. “Gaining this knowledge can help manage Southern Ocean fisheries to avoid disrupting the Antarctic food chain.”

A microbial biology team, led by Andrew Davidson, will explore the effects of growing ocean acidification on microbes, across six 650-liter tanks called “minicosms,” which will model different carbon dioxide concentrations. “Microbes are the base of the marine food web, directly or indirectly supporting all life in the Southern Ocean. They also drive the ‘biological pump,’ the process by which marine life transfers CO² from the atmosphere to the deep ocean,” he said.

source

No comments: