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The new study (Widespread Biological Response to Rapid Warming on the Antarctic Peninsula), published in the journal Current Biology, found that over the past 50 years increases in temperature have boosted the growth of moss and microbes in Antarctica.
Since the 1950s, annual temperatures in Antarctica have risen by about half a degree Celsius each decade, which is much faster than the global average.
Through the study of core samples taken from 150-year-old moss banks, the researchers were able to get a clear picture of how rising temperatures have affected the ecology of the Peninsula.
Previous research already showed how plants and microbes growing at the southern end of the Antarctic Peninsula underwent unprecedented ecological changes over time.
Now, these researchers confirmed that the changes are happening all over the Peninsula.
For their follow-up study, the team analyzed five extra samples from three sites, including three Antarctic islands,
Those different sites house some of the oldest moss banks over a 600-kilometer transect along the Peninsula.
After analyzing the core samples, the team concluded that the Peninsula has undergone fundamental and widespread changes. The data showed increased biological activity as the Peninsula has warmed in the last 50 years.
Matt Amesbury, lead author and a researcher at the University of Exeter, said that their data provide a much clearer idea of the scale over which these changes are occurring since previous studies only identified such a response in a single location at the far south of the Antarctic Peninsula.
As the temperature keeps rising, the researchers noted that there is more to come.
They expect that the terrestrial ecosystems of the Antarctic Peninsula will continue to experience rapid changes due to global warming.
Dan Charman, who led the research at Exeter, added that the temperature increase has had a significant effect on the growth rates and microbial activity of the Antarctic moss banks.
Adding that if this trend continues and the amounts of ice-free land from continued glacier retreat keeps increasing, the Antarctic Peninsula will be a much greener place in the future.
At the moment, there is about 0.34 percent of the entire Antarctic continent that is predominantly ice-free.
Though the Antarctic is clearly showing some significant changes in moss growth and microbiological activity, the researchers noted that the Antarctic will remain an icy place for a long time to come.
Curious to learn more about the Peninsula's history, the researchers said that they will continue to analyze more cores stretching back thousands of years to explore the impact of climate changes throughout the history of the frozen continent.
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