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ANTARCTIC WILDLIFE
Adapting to the Cold
All the organisms which live in the Antarctic area have
to deal with very harsh living conditions. Under normal
conditions, the temperature limits for animal activity range
from slightly below 0ºC (32ºF), when body fluids freeze, to
45-50ºC (113-122ºF), when proteins coagulate and dissolved
albuminoids break down.
The optimum temperature for life is often close to the maximum
temperature an animal can tolerate. Climactic fluctuations
demand constant adaptation, and both in water and on land
animal diversity decreases where conditions approach the
limit, such as in polar areas, deserts, and high mountains.
Animals can be divided into two broad types - those whose
internal body temperature, and therefore metabolism, varies
according to the ambient temperature; and those whose internal
body temperature remains relatively constant.
Variable body temperature
The invertebrates and fishes of Antarctica are of the
first kind, and so are directly affected by the ambient
temperature. This means that the lower their body temperature,
the lower is their metabolic rate. It also means that they run
the risk of freezing.
Terrestrial Animals
In Antarctica, terrestrial animals must endure
tremendous variations in temperature, whereas the aquatic
animals live in a more uniform environment. In order to
survive freezing an insect or mite must prevent ice from
forming inside its cells, and at the same time induce ice
formation slowly within the rest of its body, including the
contents of the gut, the blood, and the spaces between the
cells. Some of them appear to become dehydrated when exposed
to low temperatures, and this causes the salts, sugars, and
other constituents to concentrate in tissues, thereby reducing
the freezing point.
If the cells are not ruptured during freezing the animal
stands a good chance of surviving. Freeze-tolerant insects and
mites produce "cryo-protectant" chemicals, such as glycerol,
which allow body tissues to survive freezing by reducing the
proportion of body water locked up in ice.
The marine Antarctic environment is very stable, but its
temperature is close to or below the freezing temperature of
fresh water. Many marine invertebrates deal with this
situation by accumulating salts and organic compounds, such as
glucose and amino acids, which lower the freezing point of the
body fluids.
Antarctic Fishes
The fishes, like marine fishes everywhere, maintain a
body salinity slightly lower than that of the sea water in
which they live. Theoretically, one would therefore expect
them to freeze at a slightly higher temperature than does sea
water (which freezes at -1.8ºC, or 28.8ºF). Some Antarctic
fishes can actually lower their freezing point by accumulating
an abundance of sodium, potassium, or chloride ions, or urea,
in their body tissues.
The enzyme systems of Antarctic fishes are so efficient that
they are able to maintain a high level of activity even in
these extremely cold waters. One family is able to synthesize
glycoproteins, which act like an antifreeze by inhibiting the
normal growth of ice crystals within their tissues. The
content of dissolved oxygen is so high in the cold Antarctic
waters that many fishes are able to survive with little or no
red blood cells. This gives them a white, or nearly colorless
appearance. It is interesting to note that if these fishes
come into prolonged contact with sea ice, their tissues will
freeze and death results.
Constant body temperature
The birds and mammals of Antarctica, on the other hand,
are of the second main type. They are able to maintain an
optimal internal temperature regardless of the cold. Living at
the optimum temperature means that their life processes, such
as nerve transmissions, muscle contraction, digestion, etc.,
operate at their most efficient rates - but at a high
metabolic cost.
In order to maintain stable high internal body temperatures,
these animals must somehow insulate themselves from the cold.
The two groups - birds and mammals - accomplish this in
different ways. Air is a very poor heat conductor and is
readily available as an effective insulator. The birds take
full advantage of this by using feathers to retain a layer of
air around their bodies. Coverts and contour feathers cover
fluffy down which holds the air close to the body. Those birds
with flexible wings can hold their wings close to the body and
receive even more protection from wind and low temperatures.
Feathers
Birds must prevent their feathers becoming waterlogged.
Water conducts heat about 25 times better than air, so it very
quickly absorbs heat from the body. Most Antarctic birds have
a very well developed oil gland near the base of the tail.
When they preen, the birds rub this oily secretion all over
their plumage in order to make it water resistant.
In addition, birds lack exposed structures, such as ears and
tails, which have many blood vessels near the surface. Their
legs and beaks also carry few or no blood vessels. This helps
to avoid cooling the blood.
Penguins are the most aquatic of the seabirds, and have
evolved a modified plumage that has highly effective
insulating properties. Most birds grow feathers in narrow
tracts, and then fluff them out to cover all the exposed skin.
Penguins, however, have many more feathers, and almost the
entire body surface is covered with a dense, tightly packed
growth of feathers. The scalelike outer parts overlap, and are
almost impermeable to wind or water. And on the lower shafts
grow tufts that form an insulating layer of fluffy down.
Besides feathers, penguins also have a thick layer of fat or
blubber just below the skin.
In fact, penguins are so well insulated that they are poorly
equipped to deal with warm temperatures. The skin of their
feet has more blood vessels than other birds, which they use
to radiate heat when necessary. They dilate these blood
vessels to lose heat on land and constrict them to conserve
heat when they are in the sea. This accounts for the rosy pink
feet of the nesting or roosting penguins that one sees on
land. Compared with the white feet of penguins which have just
come out of the water.
Insulating blubber
All the mammals found in Antarctica (except humans, of
course) are aquatic. The cetaceans (whales and dolphins)
protect themselves from heat loss with a thick layer of
oil-rich, subcutaneous fat, or blubber. Unlike most mammals,
the cetaceans have virtually no hair and so cannot use air for
insulation. They are unable to come out of the water
occasionally in order to preen, clean and aerate their fur.
Manatees and dugongs, which are also completely aquatic, do
not have much hair.
Fat serves a dual purpose since it is not only an excellent
insulator, but also stores energy to allow the animals to
survive when food is scarce. But in general, animals that
maintain a constant body temperature need to consume more
food, to maintain heat production, when ambient temperatures
are low. They need about 50 percent more food in winter than
in summer, but food is harder to come by in winter. Therefore
the cetaceans - along with most seals and seabirds - migrate
to lower latitudes and a warmer climate during the Antarctic
winter. (However, penguins and some seals do remain in
Antarctic waters year round. They simply move from the coastal
areas, where they spend the summer, to the edge of the sea ice
in winter.)
The Antarctic seals and fur seals (collectively known as
pinnipeds) have a thick layer of insulating fat, like the
cetaceans, but they also have fur as an added protection
against the cold. As much as 50 percent of the body weight of
some seals is skin and fat. In fact, seals have such efficient
protection against heat loss that they cause little or no
visible melting on the ice even after lying in one spot for
several hours, and will retain a high internal body
temperature many hours after death.
Warm fur coats
The fur of seals and fur seals consists of two
different types of hair: long, coarse guard hairs and short,
woolly underfur. Most seals have from two to five underfur
hairs for each guard hair, which provides a fur coat of
relatively low insulation value, so they rely mostly on their
fat to prevent heat loss.
Fur seals, however, have as many as 70 underfur hairs for each
guard hair, and this gives them a fur coat with superb
insulation. Unfortunately, the dense, luxurious coat of fur
seals was highly valued as a commercial commodity. In fact, it
was the ever-widening search for new fur seal populations, as
the known populations were progressively decimated, which led
to the eventual discovery of Antarctica in the early 19th
century.
Antarctic Birds
The most obvious and commonly seen animals of
Antarctica are the birds. The species diversity is very low,
for reasons already explained. Only 43 species of birds occur
south of the Antarctic Convergence, nearly all of them
seabirds. Many ornithologists believe that Wilson's
Storm-petrel, which breeds by the millions in Antarctica, may
be the most numerous bird in the world.
Penguins
These birds epitomize the Antarctic. Although the 17
species of penguins are all found in the southern hemisphere,
most of them live north of the Antarctic Convergence; the
Galapagos penguin actually lives at the equator. Of all the
penguins, only the Emperor and Adélie are restricted to
Antarctic habitats. All penguins are flightless and adapted
for life in cold water, so even those found in the low
latitudes are dependent upon cold water currents for their
livelihood.
Penguins are the most aquatic of the seabirds, and they spend
most of their lives at sea, except when moulting or rearing
young. Their ancestors were flying birds, as shown by the
similarities in their pectoral girdle to that of modern flying
species. The main reasons why birds fly are to search for
food, evade predators, and migrate; penguins fly underwater.
The wings of penguins are reduced in size, stiff and flat.
They are adapted to propel the birds through the heavy medium
of water. Unlike most birds, penguins swim by flapping their
wings underwater rather than paddling with their feet.
Penguins are quite similar in appearance and behavior to the
flightless great auk of the northern hemisphere (which became
extinct in 1844). That bird had long been known by the name
"penguin" in English, so when the first British sailors
arrived in the southern oceans they transferred the name to
the newly discovered flightless birds, simply because they
looked like the familiar great auk.
Birds which can fly have lightweight or even hollow bones, and
air sacs within the body to help reduce body weight and
decrease the wing loading. Penguins, however, have dense,
solid bones and no air sacs, in order to counteract buoyancy,
and dive to great depths.
Their bodies are very streamlined, but even so, when they stop
moving their wings they slow down very quickly. To avoid
coming to a halt each time they break the surface to breathe,
penguins have developed a method of swimming termed porpoising.
This allows them to swim rapidly just below the surface and
when necessary propel themselves out of the water in a low
arc, take a quick breath, and continue on their way. This may
also be useful in escaping from an underwater predator, such
as a leopard seal.
Most penguins can submerge for 5-7 minutes, but the largest
species (the emperor penguin) can submerge for up to 18
minutes. The Emperor Penguin dives to 630 meters (2,070 feet).
Most other species do not normally go deeper than about 100
meters (330 feet). Penguins' maximum swimming speed is
probably about 24 kph (15 mph), but because of their small
size they often seem to be traveling faster.
Penguins generally feed on prey captured near the surface,
either close to shore or near the edge of pack ice. In
Antarctica, the larger species feed primarily on squid, while
the smaller species feed mostly on krill, with some fish and
squid. During the summer months, however, krill is the main
food item for all - as is evident from their typically
pink-colored excrement.
Virtually all penguins are social and nest in colonies. In
Antarctica, most species use open nests lined mainly with
pebbles, but also other debris such as bones and feathers. The
pebbles are collected from the beach or stolen from other
nests. Both sexes share in incubating the eggs and feeding the
young. The two largest species, the emperor and king penguins,
make no nest at all, and since they require more time to raise
their young, they lay their eggs in winter so that chicks can
be fledged by the end of summer.
Emperor Penguin colonies are on the sea ice, unlike those of
other penguins, which nest on land. The male Emperor incubates
a single egg by balancing it on top of his feet and covering
it with a special brood pouch (the same method is used by the
king penguin). He must stand upright and shuffle around with
the egg for about two months, while his mate is out at sea
feeding. If the egg hatches before the female returns to
relieve him, the male can feed the new-born chick with small
quantities of crop secretions containing fat and protein.
In some penguin species the young form groups, or creches,
which can then be guarded by just a few adults; this allows
most of the adult penguins to spend longer at sea feeding.
There is always a lot of activity at penguin colonies, and the
sights, sounds, and smells are unforgettable. Incubation
usually lasts 5 to 6 weeks. The fledging period varies quite
widely, with Adélies and Chinstraps leaving the colony at
about seven weeks, while for gentoos the time is 14 weeks. The
young are fed by regurgitation, and take the food from inside
the mouths of the adults.
Penguins typically have very strong feet with large, well
developed claws with which to climb slippery rocks or ice.
Feathers account for about 80 percent of the penguins'
insulative properties, while fat provides the other 20
percent. Penguins have a very high internal body temperature
(about 38ºC or 101ºF) as well as a high metabolic rate. They
have no problem surviving - indeed, thriving - in the cold,
harsh climate of Antarctica.
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