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L'Antàrtida, molt més que gel
L'Atzavara 13 (2005)
W.E. Arntz, C. Orejas i J.M. Gili. L’Antàrtida: un continent únic.
L'Atzavara, 13: 5-24
For the major part of people that visit the Antarctic,
it is one of the most beautiful places on earth. Its gigantic icebergs,
ice shelves, peculiar fauna, and exceptional environmental conditions
are found nowhere else on the globe. The rock and permanent ice of the
Antarctic landmass cover about 14 millions km2. If the ice melted, Antarctica
would consist of the East Antarctic continent and the archipelago of
West Antarctic leading northward to the Antarctic Peninsula. The winter
sea ice roughly doubles the effective area of Antarctica. At its deepest
point, the dome of the polar ice sheet is 4800 meters while the South
Pole stands on 2.8 km of the ice. During the last decades the studies
on both the sea ice zone and the water column have undergone profound
changes as to the appreciation of these subsystems in terms of their
quality and productivity. The sea ice is no longer considered as a hostile
environment devoid of life except for a few warm-blooded animals which
rest or reproduce on it, on the contrary: we now know that the sea ice
maintains in its crevices and channels, and under its lower surface,
an abundant life, rich in biomass, perfectly adapted to high salinities
and low temperatures, and even revealing a certain diversity. The water
column is not characterised by a generally high primary productivity
as was thought two decades ago, but is rather an oligotrophic retention
system that is dominated by small microalgae and protozooplankton, in
which the blooms of the large diatoms are restricted principally to the
Polar Front and neritic areas. On the other hand, many recent studies
on the communities located on the sea floor, seem to confirm the image
of an essentially complex, often diverse, system with a largely endemic
fauna characterised by retarded life strategies which are adapted to
the polar environment. The degree of coupling of the benthic fauna to
the highly seasonal primary production is very close in some groups but
quite contrary in others. This may reflect the consequences of recent
glacial periods which caused a frequent shift on the continental ice
edge combined with changes in sea ice cover
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