
King crabs
invade Antarctica
" It's like a scene out of a sci-fi movie -- thousands, possibly
millions, of king crabs are marching through icy, deep-sea waters and up
the Antarctic slope.
"They are coming from the deep, somewhere between 6,000 to 9,000 feet
down," said James McClintock, Ph.D., University of Alabama at Birmingham
Endowed Professor of Polar and Marine Biology.

Shell-crushing crabs haven't been in Antarctica, Earth's southernmost
continent, for hundreds or thousands, if not millions, of years,
McClintock said. "They have trouble regulating magnesium ions in their
body fluids and get kind of drunk at low temperatures."
But something has changed, and these crustaceans are poised to move
by the droves up the slope and onto the shelf that surrounds Antarctica.
McClintock and other marine researchers interested in the continent are
sounding alarms because the vulnerable ecosystem could be wiped out, he
said.
Antarctic clams, snails and brittle stars, because of adaptation to
their environment, have soft shells and have never had to fight
shell-crushing predators. "You can take an Antarctic clam and crush it
with your hands," McClintock said. They could be the main prey for these
crabs, he said. Loss of unique mollusks could jeopardise organisms with
disease-fighting compounds, McClintock said. Sea squirts, for example,
produce an agent that fights skin cancer. If the crabs eat them, it
could bring McClintock's research with that organism to a halt.
McClintock's chemical ecology programme has published more than 100
papers on species researchers have discovered, including the compound
that combats skin cancer and one to treat flu, that are being explored
by drug companies."I am very concerned that species could disappear, and
we could lose a cure to a disease," he said.
McClintock's colleague Sven Thatje, Ph.D., an evolutionary biologist
at the University of Southampton in England, saw the first signs of the
king crab invasion in 2007. He spotted a lone crab climbing up the
slope. McClintock and Rich Aronson, Ph.D., a paleoecologist at Florida
Institute of Technology, put together a proposal to launch the first
systematic search for king crabs in Antarctica. With Sven as chief
expedition scientist, the team headed back with two ships and a
submarine earlier this year."We ran transects up the slope and
discovered hundreds and hundreds of king crabs, which could translate
into millions across broad expanses of coastal Antarctica," he said.
"They are adults, males and females. They appear healthy and have all
the ingredients needed to produce a healthy population."The king crabs'
large numbers on the slope suggest that they are increasing in number at
a rate faster than anticipated, McClintock said. "Before long, they
could be in shallow water and on the shelf," he said. McClintock and his
fellow researchers are exploring causes for the invasion, which they
believe is linked to human-induced climate warming. Around 40,000
tourists visit the area each year. For now, McClintock and his team are
reviewing the thousands of images they captured during their submarine
exploration.
His team is analysing the data and plans to have its findings
published in a major journal within a year.
"The whole ecosystem could change," McClintock said. "And this is
just one example of a species expanding its range into a new territory.
There will certainly be more as the climate warms up."
-ScienceDaily
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