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Evidence of plant and animal communities at exposed and subglacial (cave) geothermal sites in Antarctica

Date

Authors

Fraser, Ceridwen
Connell, Laurie
Lee, Charles K.
Cary, S. Craig

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Verlag

Abstract

Geothermal areas, such as volcanoes, might have acted as glacial microrefugia for a wide range of species. The heavily glaciated but volcanically active Antarctic continent presents an ideal system for assessing this hypothesis. Ice-free terrain around volcanoes in Antarctica is, however, often restricted to small patches, whereas subglacial cave systems, formed by vented volcanic steam, can be extensive and interconnected. No observations of macrobiota have yet been made for subglacial geothermal environments in Antarctica, but these organisms are often patchily distributed and can be difficult to find. We carried out metabarcoding (eDNA) analyses of soil samples taken from exposed areas on three volcanoes in Victoria Land, and subglacial caves on Mount Erebus. We found evidence of numerous eukaryotic groups, including mosses, algae, arthropods, oligochaetes and nematodes, at both exposed and subglacial sites. Our findings support the notion that geothermal areas—including subglacial environments—can nurture biodiversity in glaciated regions.

Description

Citation

Source

Polar Biology

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Restricted until

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