Blue Ice Oases of Microbial Life on the Antarctic Ice Sheet
Informations
- Funding country
Norway
- Acronym
- -
- URL
- -
- Start date
- 1/1/2019
- End date
- 12/31/2023
- Budget
- 1,221,759 EUR
Fundings
Name | Role | Start | End | Amount |
---|---|---|---|---|
FRIMEDBIO - Independent projects - Medicine, Health Sciences and Biology | Grant | - | - | 1,221,759 EUR |
Abstract
The East Antarctic Ice Sheet is Earth's largest freshwater ecosystem, containing bacteria, algae, viruses and other microbes transported there by wind and redistributed by ice flow. We have therefore been studying how microorganisms survive in the ice sheet by retrieving samples from some of the oldest surface ice (many thousands of years old) outcropping in the vicinity of Troll Research Station, Antarctica. During a successful field campaign at Troll from December 2019 to January 2020, we collected six glacier ice cores, with the aim of determining whether microbes become active once there is sufficient energy and water to allow for biological production. We found that these conditions were met in the top part of the ice cores, since the sun’s energy could penetrate into the wind-polished blue ice and cause melting at about 0.5 meters depth for much of the summer. In most places, the penetration of the light is strongly reduced by small air bubbles in the near-surface ice and so we have measured the abundance and size of these bubbles in order to predict how light is scattered through this important zone. This work was combined with the mapping of other Antarctic Blue Ice Areas in order to understand the regional distribution of near-surface melting and biological production. About 1% of the ice sheet supports favourable conditions for blue ice ecosystems to develop. We have found that rock particles are critical for allowing microorganisms to live within the blue ice. Their dark colour absorbs much more of the sun’s energy than the bubbles in the ice, leading to meltwater flow and the accumulation of the particles in melt pools known as "cryoconite holes". Mapping showed that the rock particles are derived via two processes: dust deposition from above, and erosion of bedrock near ridges from below. We have found that these holes are far more important hotspots for nutrient enrichment and biological processes than the pure ice, even if water is present. This is quite different to the situation we found in Svalbard, where the ice contains many more living microorganisms. Furthermore, even in the cryoconite holes, rates of biological production seem to be very low compared to both Svalbard and other near-coastal glaciers in Antarctica. Very distinct nutrient and chemical conditions develop in the holes, including high nitrate, phosphate and silica concentrations relative to the neighbouring snow and ice. These conditions most likely reflect efficient recycling of nutrients by a community dominated by bacteria, nutrient release from the rock particles and a lack of “greedier” algae and other, larger organisms. These are signs that the high elevation and great distance to the coast make Troll ideal for examining the limits of life on Earth’s surface. The BIOICE team is performing detailed biological analysis of the microorganisms in the snow, ice and meltwater, as well as the sediment in the cryoconite holes. Results from the molecular (DNA) analyses show almost no detectable cells in the pure ice. In the sediment from the holes, we have found Cyanobacteria are dominant, closely followed by Actinobacteriota, and then Proteobacteria and Bacteroidota. This is surprisingly diverse, especially when compared to the pure glacier ice, where no DNA could be reliably recovered. These communities are now being compared to similar samples from Svalbard. We expect to find that the cryoconite holes are so important because the rock particles provide important nutrients and also a long-lived, stable habitat that survives from one summer to the next.