Australia's contribution to the International Polar Year
Australian Antarctic scientists joined with polar researchers around the world to celebrate two years of intensive, internationally coordinated scientific research for the International Polar Year (2007-2009), on 25 February 2009. A celebration was held in Geneva, Switzerland, coinciding with the release of the report, The State of Polar Research. This report provides an overview of the collective impact of international and interdisciplinary research conducted during the IPY, and the future of polar research (see International polar snapshot).
During the IPY, five Australian-led research projects made significant advances in scientific understanding in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean (see below for details). Australia also contributed to many other international projects. For all projects, the IPY provided an opportunity to collaborate with scientists from different nations and different scientific disciplines, enabling research on a larger and more comprehensive scale than ever before.
Many of the projects gathered information which has been, or aims to be, stored in broadly accessible databases. These data are a key IPY legacy and will be invaluable for future research and, in some cases, will provide benchmark information against which environmental change can be observed. A number of observational systems and associated infrastructure were also established, and equipment installed, which will enable continued and long-term research. Some research has already instigated practical changes that will assist future conservation of the Antarctic environment.
As well as building relationships with new and existing scientists, science students and research institutions, Australian IPY scientists also engaged with the general public. A range of public outreach and education activities were conducted, including IPY days, school visits, and the creation of web blogs and educational and scientific websites.
Altogether, the success of the Australian projects in delivering on the four major goals of the IPY – advances in polar knowledge, a legacy of infrastructure and observational systems, inspiring a new generation of scientists, and public outreach – will ensure the scale, success and broad understanding of Antarctic research, made possibly by the IPY, will continue.
ALIENS IN ANTARCTICA
Most (89%) fresh fruit and vegetables examined by the Australian team were clear of propagules. The remaining items, such as these pears and onions, were either infected with fungi (9%) or had evidence of the presence of insects (2%).
Photo: Dana Bergstrom
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Teams examined the type and number of 'propagules' (seeds, spores and eggs) that could be unintentionally imported into Antarctica on personal clothing and equipment, fresh food, cargo, and more than 40 ships and aircraft. Crews and passengers were also surveyed to ascertain the extent of travel that people had done before heading south, to identify the geographic range from which invasive species could be drawn.
The Australian team examined over 2000 items of fresh fruit and vegetables destined for Australian Antarctic stations and conducted laboratory-based simulations to look at seed dispersal and germination. Details of this work are described in Australian Antarctic Magazine 14: 28, 2008. As a result of this research the scientists recommended that certain produce should not be accepted within the Australian Antarctic program in future.
Data and information gathered during the project are now being analysed and will be reported at Antarctic Treaty meetings; at the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research Biology symposium; and through the scientific literature. Ultimately, the information will be used to improve conservation and protection practices in the Antarctic region and other sensitive areas around the world.
SEA ICE PHYSICS AND ECOSYSTEM EXPERIMENT
The Sea Ice Physics and Ecosystem eXperiment (SIPEX), involving 45 scientists from 12 countries, has improved scientists' understanding of the relationship between sea ice physical processes and the biological environment within and under the ice. The program, led by the Australian Antarctic Division and the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre, was conducted on a 55-day multi-disciplinary sea ice voyage, at a time of maximum sea ice extent in East Antarctica. During this time scientists took a series of measurements at 15 'ice stations', to characterise the sea ice environment (Australian Antarctic Magazine 14:14-19, 2008).
Scientists prepare to deploy an acoustic doppler current profiler to measure ocean currents beneath the ice and a GPS compass to assess sea ice drift.
Photo: Sandy Zicus
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During SIPEX, field measurements of snow properties as well as sled-based radar measurements provided valuable insights into 'radar returns' (returning signals) from the snow surface, ice/snow interface and intermediate layers within the snow pack. This allowed scientists to identify the snow layers that most affect the reflection of a radar signal and to estimate snow thickness. Coupled with airborne radar and laser altimetry measurements, this information will play a pivotal role in the interpretation of satellite altimetry data and the development of global ice and snow thickness maps.
To understand linked physical-biological sea ice processes, detailed measurements were made of ice properties, including ice structure, inorganic nutrient concentrations, trace elements (such as iron), and biological parameters such as ice algal biomass and species composition. In addition, Antarctic krill was sampled using trawls and camera systems lowered under the ice.
The combined data show a strong increase in biological production (such as algal growth and krill growth and reproduction) during the latter half of the research voyage, indicating that the voyage captured the onset of biological activity during the winter-spring transition.
The Surface and Under Ice Trawl is equipped with a high-resolution video system to film the subsurface of the sea ice
Photo: Patti Virtue
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SIPEX involved scientists from many different countries, a number of which now have improved research links and capabilities with Australia. This is particularly true of the Japanese program with which Australia is now engaging in closer ties on climate change research, and with European collaborators on calibration and validation efforts on the new CryoSat-2 altimetry satellite, which will be launched in November 2009. The voyage also resulted in a new collaboration with researchers from the Netherlands (Wageningen IMARES) and strengthened existing collaboration with German and Norwegian colleagues.
A great deal of airborne data was collected during SIPEX, including aerial photographs over sea ice. This will be archived with images from other field campaigns, as well as biological data, at the Australian Antarctic Data Centre. The laser and radar altimetry, once fully processed, will provide a reference to regional sea ice and snow thickness in the study region.
A workshop held in Italy in March 2009, brought together the participants from different programs, including SIPEX and SIMBA, to explore synergies in terms of data analysis and joint or complementary publications. The workshop selected 43 papers for publication in a special volume of Deep Sea Research II, which will be published in 2010.
SOLAR LINKAGES TO ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES
During the IPY the Solar Linkages to Atmospheric Processes (SLAP) investigated the links between changes in solar output and weather and climate.
Meteorological and solar variability influences on the 'atmospheric electric circuit' (a current that flows around the world, between the ground and lower reaches of the ionosphere) are well established. The unanswered question is whether the electric circuit actively links solar variability and weather, or if it responds passively to both meteorological and solar variations. Understanding this interaction is important because changes in the global electric circuit, caused by solar variability, could alter the conditions under which thunderstorms develop.
Russian scientist, Evgeny Gruzinov, runs and services the scientific equipment installed at Vostok.
Photo: RAE
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The project scientists recently published evidence supporting a day-to-day meteorological variation linked to solar activity, and showing that the process operates via the atmospheric electric circuit – i.e. there is an active link between the electric circuit, solar variability and weather. This supports a new link between solar variability and climate in addition to solar irradiance and UV ozone modulation described in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fourth Assessment Report.
A model of the global electric circuit has been developed by collaborators at the University of Texas, incorporating variations in cosmic rays, energetic particles, natural radioactivity and aerosols. Outputs from the model will be compared with measured atmospheric circuit responses to these variations, to refine understanding of the processes involved.
The Vostok and Concordia data sets will ultimately reside in the Australian Antarctic Data Centre and the Global Circuit Project of the University of Houston. Data from the West Antarctic deployments will be available via the British Antarctic Survey Data Access and Browsing System. Scientists will continue collecting data over at least the next two years to address their research goals.
CENSUS OF ANTARCTIC MARINE LIFE
The Census of Antarctic Marine Life (CAML) and its north polar counterpart, the Arctic Ocean Diversity project, have pioneered new understandings of the evolution and diversity of life.
These solitary sea-squirts (ascidians) stand up to half a metre high on the sea bed, providing a platform for other filter feeding animals, and the brittle stars in the foreground. They were found in sediments off Larsen A and Terre Adélie, during CAML voyages.
Photo: J.Gutt, AWI
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Altogether, CAML revealed that Antarctica is a single bioregion united by the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. The region is unexpectedly rich in species diversity, and molecular techniques show Antarctica to be the birthplace of many species, driven by glacial cycles over millions of years. For example, eight genera of octopus were in Antarctica 30 million years ago – about the time that the polar continent separated from South America. Since then, different octopus types have repeatedly colonised the deep sea, radiating northwards when the ice retreats. Similar patterns are expected with other species, including isopods (crustaceans related to shrimp and crabs) and sea spiders.
The major legacy of CAML is the SCAR-MarBIN (Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research Marine Biodiversity Network) dataportal, which contains data collected on some 14 000 species – a benchmark against which future change in marine communities around Antarctica can be assessed.
In partnership with Canada's Guelph University, CAML is 'barcoding' (analysing DNA sequences) for some 3000 Antarctic species, with SCAR-MarBIN creating related data storage, analysis and visualization tools. Analysis of genetic variation across Antarctica, across different depths and/or between sub-Antarctic islands will then be possible. This work will help identify new species and 'cryptic' species (species that are difficult to distinguish from each other). Eventually, the information will be integrated with the Barcode of Life data system.
The CAML team received an award for 'overall excellence' from the parent program, Census of Marine Life.
Photo: CAML
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The Census of Antarctic Marine Life (CAML) recently received an award for 'overall excellence' from its parent program, the Census of Marine Life (COML), which coordinates 14 international field projects. CAML leader, Professor Michael Stoddart (centre of photo), of the Australian Antarctic Division, said the award recognised CAML's approach to and success in science, educational and outreach activities and cooperation and collaboration.
CLIMATE OF ANTARCTICA AND THE SOUTHERN OCEAN
The Climate of Antarctica and the Southern Ocean (CASO) program, led by the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre and CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research, is working towards obtaining a circumpolar snapshot of the physical environment of the Southern Ocean. This snapshot will enhance scientists' understanding of the role of the Southern Ocean in past, present and future climate, and improve climate predictions from models that incorporate a better understanding of southern polar processes.
Voyage transects for the CASO program provide a synoptic circumpolar snapshot of the physical environment of the Southern Ocean.
Photo: CSIRO
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During the IPY CASO, in collaboration with other IPY programs, measured a wide range of physical, chemical and biological properties of the Southern Ocean. The measurements covered the circumpolar extent of the Southern Ocean, from the surface to the sea floor and from the Antarctic continental shelf to the Subtropical Front. Scientists used a wide variety of tools, including ship transects, profiling floats, satellites, moorings and oceanographic sensors attached to marine mammals. The integrated, multi-disciplinary observations made with these tools, provide a 'proof of concept' for the long-term Southern Ocean Observing System presently under development by the international community.
One of 30 Argo floats is deployed in the Australian sector of the Southern Ocean during the International Polar Year.
Photo: Alicia Navidad, CSIRO
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Australian scientists also conducted an oceanographic transect across the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, to understand the current's interaction with the Southern Ocean overturning circulation, which regulates the heat and carbon stored by the ocean. Using instruments lowered from the ship, scientists measured temperature, salinity and oxygen concentrations, while water samples were collected from various depths and analysed for nutrients, carbon dioxide, chlorofluorocarbons, phytoplankton pigments and oxygen isotopes. Acoustic instruments were used to measure currents, and moorings were deployed to collect year-long records of water velocity and properties.
The observations showed that water sinking from the surface to the deep ocean near Antarctica is becoming fresher and less dense, demonstrating that changes in high latitude climate are being communicated rapidly to the deep ocean.
Preliminary work during a survey of Antarctic continental shelf waters, suggests that the ocean circulation patterns influence the distribution of benthic (bottom-dwelling) organisms. The oceanographic observations also showed that dense Antarctic Bottom Water was escaping from the continental shelf and sinking to the deep sea in this area, even during the summer.
The data collected during the CASO voyages has been archived in the international hydrographic data archive – the CLIVAR & Carbon Hydrographic Data Office.
Back to Australian Antarctic Magazine 16: 2009 index
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