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Citation
Bergstrom, D.M., Chown, S., Convey, P., Gremmen, N., Hughes, K. Huiskes, A., Imura, S., Lebouvier, M., McIvor, E. and Tracey, P. (2007) Aliens in Antarctica - project to study exotic species and visitors in the Antarctic, Ver. 1, Australian Antarctic Data Centre - https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/ASAC_2904, Accessed: 2026-05-07
Title
Aliens in Antarctica - project to study exotic species and visitors in the Antarctic
Data Centre
Australian Antarctic Data Centre, Australia
Created Date
2007-11-08
Revision Date
2021-11-17
Expected Date of Data Release
None
Data Version
1
Parent record
None
Child record
Aliens_in_Antarctica_seed_identifications
Aliens_in_Antarctica_survey_data
Aliens_in_Antarctica_visitor_data
Aliens_in_Ant_Visitor_Numbers
ASAC_2904_Food
MI2010_11_Alien-plant-survey_JDS

Description

Metadata record for data expected from ASAC Project 2904

See the link below for public details on this project.

International Polar Year (IPY) Aliens in Antarctica will assess the threat of humans carrying non-native seeds and spores into Antarctica. We will identify routes of transport and attempt to calculate how many seeds and spores are transported each year. Our data will be used to develop techniques to mitigate this threat and hence protect Antarctica.

The impact of non-native (alien) species on ecosystems is one of the big issues of the 21st Century. Antarctica is not immune to this problem with some alien species having established on the Antarctic continent and on most sub-Antarctic islands. The impacts of alien species can include substantial loss of biodiversity and damage to ecosystem processes. Such impacts will be exacerbated by the rapid climate change, now being experienced in parts of Antarctica.

Surrounded by the vast Southern Ocean, Antarctica's protective isolation is being chipped away by the movement of people and cargo to the region by national programs and the now booming tourist industry. Over 40,000 people travel to the Antarctic each year. This international project will assess the pathways of propagule (seeds, eggs, spores etc) transfer, the extent to which people from many nations, unintentionally carry propagules of alien species into the Antarctic region and the size of the threat. It will lead to the creation of appropriate mitigation methods by the Antarctic Treaty to protect the fragile Antarctic ecosystem. Furthermore, the project will provide valuable insight into the movement of alien propagules worldwide. It has been estimated that by 2010, the number of tourists crossing international boarders globally each year, will be around 1 billion people.

The travel histories of some 15,000 Antarctic tourists and researchers will be complied, assisted by the cooperation of four tourist operators, 15 supply vessels of national Antarctic programmes, and six air operators. One thousand items of cargo from 7 National Antarctic programmes will be inspected for propagules of alien species. The study has the full support from the Council of Managers of National Antarctic Programs, the International Association of Antarctic Tour Operators, and researchers from seven nations.

Taken from the 2008-2009 Progress Report:
Progress against objectives:
Considerable progress has been made on all objectives. All samples of propagules (greater than 1000 samples from over 50 voyages and examination of cargo/ food/ building material from 5 nations) have been sorted and propagules extracted. The majority of these propagules have been photographed and where possible identified. Analysis of the data is currently underway.


Taken from the 2009-2010 Progress Report:
Progress against objectives:
The International Polar Year project is examining the type and amount of 'propagules' (seed, spores and eggs) that are unintentionally imported into the region on clothes, shoes or hand luggage, as well as how many propagules are likely to be deposited and whether they will germinate and grow. Cargo, fresh food and travellers' gear destined for Antarctica were inspected during the first season of IPY and are now currently being analysed. Considerable progress on the quantifiaction of the threat of alien species to Antarctic ecosystems has been made. Results of our analysies will be presented at ATCM 33.

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Quality

The dates provided in temporal coverage are approximate only. See the child records for exact dates.

The latitudes and longitudes provided in spatial coverage are approximate only.

Taken from the 2008-2009 Progress Report:
Laboratory activity/analysis:
Samples from both cargo, food and passengers have been examined for propagules. Identification evaluation for most samples is near complete. Sample evaluation will be completed by the end of May. Data analyses will be completed in the second half of of 2009. A workshop for data analysis and write up is scheduled for July at the SCAR Biology Symposium. Initial analysis of the 5600 passenger survey responses have been completed.

Taken from the 2009-2010 Progress Report:
Propagule cross checking has been halted due the need for us to move laboratories late in 2009. Our new laboratory is still not yet functioning so this work has been delayed. Data analysis has also been delayed.

Access

Data are available for download from the child records associated with this project.

Temporal Coverages

Spatial Coverages

Science Keywords

Additional Keywords

  • Aliens
  • IPY
  • introduced species
  • propagules

Locations

  • OCEAN > SOUTHERN OCEAN
  • OCEAN > SOUTHERN OCEAN
  • CONTINENT > ANTARCTICA
  • GEOGRAPHIC REGION > POLAR
  • GEOGRAPHIC REGION > SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE

Platforms

  • FIELD INVESTIGATION
  • LABORATORY
  • SHIPS

Instruments

    None

Researchers

  • bergstrom, dana (INVESTIGATOR,TECHNICAL CONTACT)
  • chown, steven (INVESTIGATOR,TECHNICAL CONTACT)
  • convey, pete (TECHNICAL CONTACT)
  • gremmen, niek (TECHNICAL CONTACT)
  • hughes, kevin (TECHNICAL CONTACT)
  • huiskes, ad (TECHNICAL CONTACT)
  • imura, satoshi (TECHNICAL CONTACT)
  • lebouvier, marc (TECHNICAL CONTACT)
  • mcivor, ewan (TECHNICAL CONTACT)
  • tracey, phil (TECHNICAL CONTACT)
  • connell, dave (DIF AUTHOR)

Use Constraints

This data set conforms to the CCBY Attribution License
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

Please follow instructions listed in the citation reference provided at http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/metadata/citation.cfm?entry_id=ASAC_2904 when using these data.

Project

  • INTERNATIONAL POLAR YEAR (Long Name)
  • IPY (Short Name)
  • Evolution and Biodiversity in the Antarctic (Long Name)
  • EBA (Short Name)
  • Aliens in Antarctica (Long Name)
  • ALIENS (Short Name)

ISO Topic

  • BIOTA
  • ENVIRONMENT
  • TRANSPORTATION

Dataset Language

  • English

Orignating Centre

  • Australian Antarctic Division

Dataset Progress

  • COMPLETE

IDN Node

  • AMD/AU
  • CEOS
  • AMD
  • IPY

Publications

Metadata Revision History

    2007-11-08 - record created by Dave Connell. 2009-04-23 - record updated by Dave Connell from information provided in the progress report. 2010-04-20 - record updated by Dave Connell from information provided in the progress report. 2016-08-26 - record updated by Dave Connell - basic updates.

Creative Commons License