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Antarctic islands surpass Galapagos for biodiversity

More sea and land animals live on the South Orkney Islands than on the tropical Galapagos Islands, a new survey shows

[video_player id=鈥漹JJsXOda鈥漖Video: Antarctic islands surpass Galapagos for biodiversity

A GROUP of isolated Antarctic islands has proven unexpectedly rich in life 鈥 home to more species of sea and land animals than the Galapagos Islands. The findings raise the issue of what effect climate change 鈥 already influencing the Antarctic 鈥 will have on this rich biodiversity.

Researchers from the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) in Cambridge and from the University of Hamburg in Germany carried out the first comprehensive biodiversity survey of the South Orkney Islands, near the tip of the Antarctic Peninsula. As well as surveying the islands themselves and deploying scuba divers, they also used trawl nets to search the surrounding water to a depth of 1500 metres.

The team found over 1200 species in total, mostly living in the sea. Over a third of them had not previously been observed in the region, and five were entirely new (Journal of Biogeography, ).

These findings challenge the traditional view that biodiversity is concentrated around the tropics and declines towards polar regions, says lead researcher David Barnes of the BAS.

While global warming may not cause the region鈥檚 overall biodiversity to fall, the species living there are likely to change. 鈥淎s the sea gets warmer, temperate species will move into Antarctica and Antarctic species will shift further south or into colder regions,鈥 says Barnes. The islands are 鈥渢he one place with a real possibility of detecting new things arriving and things leaving.鈥

鈥淪pecies composition in this region is likely to change as a result of global warming鈥

Jon Copley, a marine ecologist at the University of Southampton, UK, agrees. 鈥淭he starting point for any conservation strategy has got to be knowing what you鈥檝e got to conserve,鈥 he says, 鈥渁nd this study provides a very valuable baseline.鈥

A change in the composition of species would result in an overall loss in the Earth鈥檚 biodiversity. 鈥淎ll that it will take is for a few things to alter,鈥 says Barnes.

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