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See also: Polar Regions
Climate change impacts in Antarctica - what the IPCC 4th Assessment Report has found:
- The Antarctic pearlwort and the Antarctic hair grass currently occur in niche habitats on the Antarctic continent. Their increased abundance and distribution was ascribed to the increasing summer temperatures. Climate change is also affecting the vegetation, which is largely composed of algae, lichens and mosses, and changes are expected in future, as temperature, and water and nutrient availability change [15.2.2.1].
- The progressive warming in the Southern Ocean has been associated with major regional changes in terrestrial and marine ecosystems, in areas that have experienced warming. Increasing abundance of shallow water sponges and their predators, declining abundances of krill (with an increase in salp abundance), Adelie and Emperor penguins and Weddell seals have all been recorded [TS4.2, 1.3.4.2 & 15.2.2.1].
- Pelagic productivity/Zooplankton abundance/plankton assemblages: Biological responses to regional changes in temperature, stratification, up-welling, and other hydro-climatic changes in the Southern Ocean [1.3.4.3].
- Direct measurements reveal considerable spatial variability in temperature trends in Antarctica [15.2.1]
- Changes on the Antarctic Peninsula, subAntarctic islands and Southern Ocean have been rapid and dramatic impacts are expected [TS4.2]:
- Pole-ward migration of existing species and competition from invading species [TS4.2]
- There is evidence for freshening in the Ross Sea, probably linked to glacier melt [1.3.1.1].
