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2025.07.02 18:34 GMT+8

Antarctica's shrinking sea ice threatens wildlife, climate stability

Updated 2025.07.02 18:34 GMT+8
CGTN

Antarctic summer sea ice is retreating at record speeds, unleashing a chain reaction of environmental and social consequences that Australian experts say could profoundly alter the global climate and ecosystems, new research has revealed.

Record lows in sea-ice extent are exposing coastlines, warming oceans and disrupting delicate ecosystems, fueling public anxiety about climate change, according to a study led by the Australian Antarctic Program Partnership (AAPP) at the University of Tasmania.

As sea ice vanishes, Antarctica's coastline loses its protective barrier, leading to increased wave damage, faster ice-shelf weakening, and more iceberg calving. /VCG

The research, which synthesizes the impacts across ocean systems, ecosystems and human societies, reveals that extreme sea-ice lows, like those observed in recent years, trigger three interconnected crises, said an AAPP release on Tuesday.

As sea ice vanishes, Antarctica's coastline loses its protective barrier, leading to increased wave damage, faster ice-shelf weakening, and more iceberg calving, with six extra icebergs per 100,000 square kilometers lost, heightening sea-level rise risks, according to the study's lead author Edward Doddridge from the AAPP.

As sea ice disappears, dark open waters absorb more solar heat, and algae blooms in these areas further trap warmth, driving a persistent, self-reinforcing cycle of ocean warming, said the study published in PNAS Nexus, an extension of the U.S. journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences for high-impact, emerging research.

An emperor penguin in Antarctica. /VCG

Loss of sea ice disrupts breeding for emperor penguins and seals, deprives krill of vital habitat, and threatens to destabilize the entire Southern Ocean food web, the researchers said.

The study also links increased media coverage of Antarctic ice loss to rising climate anxiety and mental health concerns, with public interest peaking during 2023's record sea-ice lows.

(Cover: VCG)

Source(s): Xinhua News Agency
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