yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

How you survive the coldest place on Earth - Nadia Frontier


3m read
·Nov 8, 2024

The vast, white ice surface of Antarctica stretches for over 3 million square kilometers: empty, desolate, and almost completely silent. But appearances can be deceiving. On the coast of this expanse, just a few meters beneath the ice lies a multicolored constellation of life. This remarkably diverse realm is home to over 8,000 species of sea denizens who rely on an arsenal of otherworldly traits to survive. So how do these species not only live, but thrive, in conditions most animals would be unable to bear?

Antarctic waters are some of the most consistently frigid in the world, hovering below 0 degrees Celsius for a large portion of the year. This means burning energy too quickly can be deadly, so survival in this ecosystem looks slow and steady. Freezing temperatures persist even in the summer, but this season brings a rare gift: sunlight. For a brief period, it’s abundant, shining through the ice for 24 hours a day. This infusion of energy drives intense coastal phytoplankton blooms, transforming the waters into a thick green soup.

Marine life both large and small takes advantage of this bounty, including the giant Antarctic isopod. Cousins of the humble pill bug, these crustaceans can reach up to 11 centimeters long, and they never miss the opportunity for a meal. The scavengers eat a wide variety of prey, including other giant isopods. And by slowing their metabolisms, they can make this food last, with one study showing specimens surviving for 50 days without eating.

Since this adaptation involves careful conservation of energy, giant isopods spend most of their time stationary or inching across the seafloor. Meanwhile, their tiny amphipod relatives celebrate the summer by releasing offspring alongside the algal explosion, ensuring their young have an abundance of food. And sea cucumbers carpeting the seafloor hoover up the dense plankton with outstretched tentacles, producing nutrient-rich feces that nourish nearby life.

But this big summer blowout doesn’t last long. The first signs of autumn arrive in fine needles of frazil ice. These slowly coagulating crystals form a skin across the surface, then mix with falling snow before freezing into a thin crust of ice. The waters get darker and colder. And in this swiftly dimming world, a set of long, spiky limbs sidle into view.

With up to six pairs of legs, these giant sea spiders aren’t arachnids, but rather a related class of marine arthropod unique to the seafloor. In addition to housing some of the animal’s organs, its legs are covered in tiny holes, which grow more numerous as the spider ages. These holes will likely help absorb the dissolved oxygen that saturates these freezing southern waters. Since oxygen fuels growth, many local species have evolved to take advantage of this abundance, and it may be one of the reasons that gigantism is so common in this region.

Individual sea spiders, for instance, can grow to the size of dinner plates. But soon, these underwater giants will be moving slower than ever. As winter settles in, the sea floor becomes even colder. Waters fall to negative 1.8 degrees Celsius. On the surface, the thin icy crust thickens into a layer called nilas, and young sea ice starts forming ridges that block out the sun. The ocean begins to mirror the still landscape above it.

Antarctic sea cucumbers and urchins go into dormancy for months, and their metabolic rates fall to the slowest on Earth. Antarctic limpets continue feeding, but at such a gradual pace that they're largely still surviving on energy reserves from the summer. Tiny crustaceans survive off the traces of algae growing on their home’s icy ceiling, raising their young in these expansive winter nurseries. But this seemingly endless winter won't last forever.

As spring comes, light slowly begins to trickle back down through the ice. And week by week, bit by bit, this underwater world will begin waking up to begin its delicate, slow-motion dance once again.

More Articles

View All
Should I Die?
Someday, I will die. But should I? If I was offered a longer life, I would take that in a second. But how long is too long? Is death something I should deny forever, or is death and the role it plays in the universe something I am better off accepting? I …
Content Marketing Tips from Experts at First Round Capital and Andreessen Horowitz
Today we have Camille Ricketts from First Round and so much Oxy from a16z, and we have a ton of questions about content, content marketing, editorial from Twitter, so I think we’re just gonna jump right into them. Okay, good, cool. So, Adore Chung, partn…
Why You've Never Had an Original Thought
Picture this: you’re in a work meeting attempting to troubleshoot a problem that your team has been struggling to figure out. You suggest something—a solution equal parts ingenious and elegant. Your co-workers are impressed and shower you with praise, all…
Office Hours at Startup School NY 2014
So next up, all right, Gary Tan and I are going to do onstage office hours. This is most of what happens during Y.C. The partners meet individually with startups, and we give them advice about whatever problems they’re facing. It’s usually 25 minutes per …
Multiplying and dividing decimals by 10
We’ve already learned that when we multiply by ten, let’s say we took the number 53 and we were to multiply it by ten, it has the effect of shifting all the digits one place to the left. So this should be a review for you, but this was going to be 530. We…
How can a text have two or more main ideas? | Reading | Khan Academy
Hello readers. Today, I want to begin with a brief aside about physics. Unless you’re like a quantum particle or something, it’s not possible to be in two places at once. Nor is it possible to travel in two directions at once. Right? If I’m on a train fro…