News Release
Changes in the Antarctic Ecosystem: Salps versus Krill
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Relations Office
January 1, 2006
(508) 289-3340
Shelley Dawicki
WHOI biologists will travel to Antarctica in mid-February to study
salps⎯transparent, gelatinous, planktonic animals that generate massive
populations containing individuals 10 centimeters (about four inches)
long and colonial chains many meters (more than three feet) long. Salps
consume diatoms, the microscopic plant cells abundant in spring and
summer. In some years, salp populations may replace krill, which also
eat diatoms. Krill are a critical and nutritious food for many whales,
penguins, and other Antarctic animals, while salps supply little
nutrition. Scientists speculate that warmer Antarctic conditions may
favor salps over krill because diminishing sea ice formation provides
less shelter and food for juvenile krill. The research team will spend
a month on the research vessel L.M. Gould,
continuing National Science
Foundation-funded research begun in 2004. After crossing Drake Passage,
the researchers will work near Palmer Station, scuba diving and using
towed nets to study salp feeding, growth, reproduction, population
size, and transport of organic matter to deeper water. This expedition
will be featured February 21 to March 10 on the WHOI educational
resource Web site, Dive and
Discover.
Originally published: January 1, 2006

