Editorial: Biodiversity of Antarctic and Subantarctic ecosystems
The Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem
Services (IPBES) adopted a work program (2019–2030) that included, under its first
objective, the interlinkages between biodiversity and climate change (IPBES, 2019). Because
most ecosystems worldwide face multiple anthropogenic pressures, however, it is difficult to
disentangle the specific effects of climate change from those of others such as habitat
degradation, pollution or overexploitation. Against this backdrop, the Antarctic and subAntarctic (ASA) regions —including some of the most pristine environments remaining on
Earth— offer unparalleled opportunities to understand, evaluate and predict the impacts of
climate change on biodiversity in the general absence of other confounding anthropogenic
drivers. These regions serve as natural laboratories for two main reasons: first, ASA
biodiversity has already endured repeated and drastic climatic oscillations over timescales
ranging from decades to tens of millions of years, providing a unique archive of responses
to past change; second, some ASA areas are now experiencing some of the fastest rates of
warming on the planet. The South Shetland Islands, for example, have undergone profound
transformations over the past four decades, including the emergence of new ice-free areas,
streams and freshwater bodies (Lee et al., 2017; Petsch et al., 2022; Tóth et al., 2025).
Studying these transitions provides essential insights into how climate change reshapes
ecosystems when other anthropogenic drivers remain minimal.
Details
Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Maturana, Claudia S., Spencer, Hamish, Orlando, Julieta, Convey, Peter ORCID record for Peter Convey, Contador, Tamara