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How climate change is making Antarctica royally crabby

Warming waters on the Antarctic continental shelf could be inviting to King crabs, a predator that has been unable to live in those chilly waters for tens of millions of years.

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Photo courtesy of Richard B. Aronson and James B. McClintock
If climate change allows shell-crushing predators such as king crabs to return to the Antarctic continental shelf, the crabs will likely disrupt the endemic marine fauna, according to a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Ocean waters are getting hotter, and that could make Antarctica crabby.聽

Warming global temperatures are prompting many animals to shift their ranges. One of those animals, the King crab, could be moving into shallower waters off the Western coast of Antarctica, where it hasn't been found for tens of millions of years.聽

The royal crustaceans, Lithodidae, now live on the continental slope off the western Antarctic Peninsula, a surprise to researchers there. Furthermore, there are preventing the crabs from crawling up onto the continental shelf, according to a study published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

This is bad news for the crab's prey. King crabs, like聽lobsters, rays, some fish, and modern sharks,聽hunt by crushing shells, a tactic that Antarctic animals have not evolved a defense against.聽

鈥淢arine communities in shallow water environments in Antarctica look vastly different from marine communities elsewhere in the world,鈥 says study lead author Richard Aronson, head of the department of biological sciences at Florida Institute of Technology.

鈥淚f you were to go to a museum of natural history and look at the dioramas of life in the ancient seas, you鈥檇 be looking at something that doesn鈥檛 look all that hugely different from what you see in Antarctica today,鈥 says Dr. Aronson. 鈥淭he Antarctic communities are in a sense archaic or retrograde because they don鈥檛 have modern predators in them.鈥

The Antarctic continental shelf is dominated by filter feeders, marine animals that sit on top of the mud or sand, capturing particles for food, says Aronson. 鈥淭he top predators in these Antarctic communities are slow moving invertebrates like starfish and giant ribbon worms and giant sea spiders.鈥澛

For millions of years these animals have lived without fear of crushing predation. But that could all change.

King crabs, and other shell-crushing predators, were likely driven off the continental shelf by declining temperatures millions of years ago, says Aronson. But 鈥渘ow we鈥檙e running the whole thing in rapid reverse by warming the temperatures rapidly.鈥

The crabs need warmer waters to survive. Right now the crabs have been spotted mostly between 3,600 and 4,900 feet deep on the continental coast, only going as shallow as 2,759聽feet deep.

But now it is warm enough for the crabs to survive on the edge of the continental shelf in depths of just 1,300 to 1,800 feet. Aronson expects to see that temperature barrier be pushed to even shallower places as global temperatures continue to rise.

But aren鈥檛 shallow waters warmer than the depths? Actually, off the western coast of Antarctica, the opposite is true. Both converging oceanic currents and melting ice close to the surface of the ocean contribute to the chilly shallows.

Furthermore, says Aronson, the waters off this western peninsula are seeing the most dramatic rise in temperature of the region. 鈥淚t鈥檚 basically the bellwether for what鈥檚 going to be happening elsewhere in Antarctica,鈥 he says.聽

The researchers captured pictures of the continental slope to determine how many king crabs lived there. 鈥淭here were a lot more than a few,鈥 says Aronson. The researchers found about 11,655 crabs per square mile at the most populated areas.聽

鈥淲e know that it鈥檚 a dense population and we know that it鈥檚 a reproductive population,鈥 he says. The still photographs captured some crabs in what Aronson calls their 鈥渃opulatory embrace,鈥 as well as some babies and eggs.

The researchers didn鈥檛 rely solely on these photographs. They also pulled up a few live crabs to study. By examining the animals鈥 physiology, they were able to better understand the characteristics needed for king crabs to call an ecosystem home.

Aronson calls the king crabs a threat to a unique community, but the true culprit is global warming, he says. Not only will it bring shell-crushing predators back into this ecosystem, their prey will likely be especially vulnerable as they face other effects of climate change.

鈥淲e need to know what we are doing to our world,鈥 Aronson says. 鈥淲e need to know what鈥檚 going on. We need to know the full extent of climate change effects.鈥

鈥淚n this particular case, we鈥檙e making some changes that will impoverish our world鈥 by changing unique ecosystems like the one at stake, he says.聽 鈥淚f somebody took Michelangelo鈥檚 statue of David and threw it in the dumpster, would you care about it?鈥

鈥淭his is all about what we care about in our lives,鈥 says Aronson. 鈥淲e need to make some choices.鈥

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