- Share
Sustained greening of the Antarctic Peninsula observed from satellites
Nature and the biosphere
Published: 04 October 2024
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
08-10-2024 to 08-10-2025
Available on-demand until 8th October 2025
Cost
Free
Education type
Article
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
The Antarctic Peninsula has experienced considerable anthropogenic warming in recent decades. While cryospheric responses are well defined, the responses of moss-dominated terrestrial ecosystems have not been quantified. Analysis of Landsat archives (1986–2021) using a Google Earth Engine cloud-processing workflow suggest widespread greening across the Antarctic Peninsula. The area of likely vegetation cover increased from 0.863 km2 in 1986 to 11.947 km2 in 2021, with an accelerated rate of change in recent years (2016–2021: 0.424 km2 yr−1) relative to the study period (1986–2021: 0.317 km2 yr−1). This trend echoes a wider pattern of greening in cold-climate ecosystems in response to recent warming, suggesting future widespread changes in the Antarctic Peninsula’s terrestrial ecosystems and their long-term functioning.
Contact details
Email address
Telephone number
0207 8334000

Springer Healthcare Ltd
The Campus
4 Crinan Street
London
N1 9XW