Here is another exciting installment of Ambassador Huebner’s blog about his recent trip to Antarctica! Check out the first, second, and third posts. The blog below was originally posted here.
Among the differences that I’ve noticed during my second trip to Antarctica is the abundance of animal life in and around McMurdo Sound this late in the austral summer. Over the course of the week I’ve seen many hundreds of Adélie and emperor penguins, dozens of Weddell and leopard seals, Antarctic skuas, and a surprisingly large number of whales including minkes, orcas, and fins.
I am tempted to talk at length about biodiversity in Antarctica, a topic that fascinates me. Instead, though, I think I’ll just share a few pictures of what I actually saw in the McMurdo environs. Unfortunately, I’m not a quick-draw professional with my camera, and most of the animals I encountered had no patience for posing. So I mRissed the most fleeting and dramatic encounters, and the photos I did get are definitely not National Geographic quality. Sorry.












OK, now for a few informational notes. Recent studies indicate that there are more the 1,200 animal species in Antarctica. They range from microscopic mites to huge blue whales, which are believed to be the largest animals ever to have lived on Earth. Most of the species are marine. There are very few purely terrestrial species on the continent. A flightless midge measuring 1/4 inch (6.35 mm) long is the largest of those terrestrial animals.
There is great marine biodiversity, relying in large part on phytoplankton. The phytoplankton are consumed by krill, tiny shrimp-like crustaceans which form the base of the food chain for squid, fish, seabirds, seals, and whales. I saw huge masses of krill when I descended into an observation pipe through the ice during my last visit.

The bottom line is that the Ross Sea is a unique and largely intact marine ecosystem with a robust food web and abundant predators. It is a glory to behold, and it has fascinated and awed humans since the arrival of the first explorers.
It is also, though, a very fragile ecosystem facing serious long-term challenges such as anthropogenic climate change and encroachment of invasive species, as well as more immediate threats such as the introduction and expansion of commercial harvesting of fish.
However bothersome or inconvenient self-restraint may be at times, we cannot in good conscience avert our eyes from these challenges. Only man can protect the Ross Sea from man.
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