A satellite-derived baseline of photosynthetic life across Antarctica

Terrestrial vegetation communities across Antarctica are characteristically sparse, presenting a challenge for mapping their occurrence using remote sensing at the continent scale. At present there is no continent-wide baseline record of Antarctic vegetation, and large-scale area estimates remain unquantified. With local vegetation distribution shifts now apparent and further predicted in response to environmental change across Antarctica, it is critical to establish a baseline to document these changes. Here we present a 10 m-resolution map of photosynthetic life in terrestrial and cryospheric habitats across the entire Antarctic continent, maritime archipelagos and islands south of 60° S. Using Sentinel-2 imagery (2017–2023) and spectral indices, we detected terrestrial green vegetation (vascular plants, bryophytes, green algae) and lichens across ice-free areas, and cryospheric green snow algae across coastal snowpacks. The detected vegetation occupies a total area of 44.2 km2, with over half contained in the South Shetland Islands, altogether contributing just 0.12% of the total ice-free area included in the analysis. Due to methodological constraints, dark-coloured lichens and cyanobacterial mats were excluded from the study. This vegetation map improves the geospatial data available for vegetation across Antarctica, and provides a tool for future conservation planning and large-scale biogeographic assessments.

Details

Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Walshaw, Charlotte V., Gray, Andrew, Fretwell, Peter T. ORCIDORCID record for Peter T. Fretwell, Convey, Peter ORCIDORCID record for Peter Convey, Davey, Matthew P., Johnson, Joanne S. ORCIDORCID record for Joanne S. Johnson, Colesie, Claudia

On this site: Joanne Johnson, Peter Convey, Peter Fretwell
Date:
6 August, 2024
Journal/Source:
Nature Geoscience / 2024
Page(s):
16pp
Link to published article:
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-024-01492-4