Aquatic ecosystems of the McMurdo Dry Valleys
Ian Hawes, Anne-Maree Schwarz, Donna Sutherland and Clive Howard-Williams
Only a few kinds of aquatic organism can survive the extreme conditions in the streams and lakes of the Antarctic Dry Valleys.
The ice-free dry valleys adjacent to Antarctica’s McMurdo Sound have formed where the ice flowing outwards from the Polar Plateau of the continental interior is diverted away from a cluster of valleys by high inland mountain ranges. Instead of ice flowing from the plateau down these valleys, they are swept by strong, dry katabatic winds, which ensure that any precipitation falling as snow on the rocky valley floors is quickly lost to the atmosphere by the process of sublimation. The result is that the valleys are cold, dry deserts. The only ice that persists there is in the form of alpine glaciers along the steep valley sides and the permanent ice cover of the lakes on the valley floor.
When Captain Scott’s party of 1903 first discovered the dry valleys they considered them to be largely lifeless. We now know that in this apparently barren landscape a variety of aquatic ecosystems has developed, each with its characteristic flora and fauna. These systems include a network of ephemeral glacier meltstreams that drain into permanently ice-covered lakes. NIWA’s research programme in the dry valleys, in close collaboration with international colleagues (see McM–LTER panel below), is designed to find out how the extreme physical conditions structure the composition and activity of these remarkable inland aquatic ecosystems.
Of course, you only find aquatic life where there is liquid water and this is in short supply in a frozen continent. In the dry valleys the water supply is mainly from melting glacier ice, which in turn depends on a favourable combination of temperature, wind and sunshine. Ice will melt at air temperatures below 0 °C if it absorbs enough solar energy. So temperature and sunshine interact to determine the supply of water to streams. Just as climate varies from hour to hour, year to year, and century to century, the amount of water from glacier melt also varies over similar time scales. In some years the streams draining the glaciers may not flow at all; in others there may be veritable floods.
Glacier-melt streams
Only organisms that can survive and grow in the few days or weeks when liquid water is available in the melt streams, and can then tolerate the extreme winter conditions when everything is frozen at –50 °C, are capable of colonising shallow streams and ponds. So the stream communities usually comprise stresstolerant species of cyanobacteria, many of which are darkly pigmented for protection from the bright sunshine.
Without this protection, the high solar radiation (including UV) would be particularly damaging when they are exposed in dried or frozen states. Despite the harsh conditions, biomass and biodiversity of the microbial communities can be high. One reason is that there are no grazing invertebrates – or any other plants or animals – to compete with or eat the communities. So the high biomass is a result of slow accumulation over a long time, in the face of minimal disturbance.
Cyanobacteria can re-start photosynthesis within 48 hours of the return of liquid water after being “freeze-dried” in winter. Once re-hydrated they carry out the same functions as similar communities in less extreme environments. Low temperatures mean that metabolic processes happen slowly, yet the high biomass means that stream cyanobacteria can play a role in controlling the flux of nutrients along stream channels, and ultimately into the lakes. For example, microbial communities in the Onyx River that drains into Lake Vanda can remove up to 75% of the nitrate and phosphate that would otherwise reach the lake.
Ice-covered lakes
Growth conditions in the lakes are quite different from those in the streams. Here there is liquid water all year round, but the lakes retain an ice cover 3–5 m thick throughout the year. Perennial lake-ice is restricted to a few polar lakes, and it creates a special set of conditions. Ice cover prevents wind mixing, and hence dry valley lakes characteristically have exceptionally stable water columns. This allows such features as salt-water layers to persist for many years (see Lake levels below). It also limits the speed at which material such as nutrients, which tend to accumulate in the deep waters through sedimentation, can return to the upper layers of the lake. In addition, ice cover intercepts 80–99% of the sun’s energy at the surface of the lake, the exact value depending on the ice characteristics. The combination of low light, low temperature and slow supply of nutrients leads to very slow growth.
Much of the production appears to be associated with microbial mats (see also “Pond life on the McMurdo Ice Shelf”) on the beds of the lakes. As in the dry valley streams, the main organisms in these communities are cyanobacteria, but there are also diatoms, which are capable of very efficient use of the small amount of solar energy that penetrates the lake-ice cover. There are a few animals here too, though nothing more complex than tiny nematodes and tardigrades.
Lake mats grow extremely slowly due to the low light but, like the communities in streams, they can accumulate large amounts of biomass because of minimal disturbance and an absence of grazing. A unique feature arising from the accumulated slow, undisturbed growth of the mats is their annual layering. These layers appear as alternate dark (winter) and light (summer) bands that offer a record of past changes that have occurred in the dry valleys. We have sectioned cores through the mats with enough resolution to identify the bands that were being laid down as Scott’s party trekked down the Taylor Valley a century ago.
Teachers: this article can be used for NCEA Achievement Standards in Biology (1.4, 1.7, 2.4, 2.5, 2.7, 3.2, 3.4), Geography (1.1, 1.6, 1.7, 2.1, 2.6, 2.7, 3.1, 3.6, 3.7). See other curriculum connections at www.niwa.co.nz/pubs/wa/resources
This research receives FRST funding in the programme “Antarctic Aquatic Ecosystems” (C01X0220).