A group of U.S. scientists has discovered enormous blooms of algae growing in an area of the Arctic Ocean that they never thought could support the phytoplankton: below the sea ice.
A microscopic view of phytoplankton found in the Chukchi Sea at a depth of 1.5 metres below the surface of the sea ice. A microscopic view of phytoplankton found in the Chukchi Sea at a depth of 1.5 metres below the surface of the sea ice. (William Balch)
The discovery was a shock because living organisms don't usually survive underneath the ice pack that covers parts of the Arctic Ocean for much of the year and blocks out the light needed to sustain life.
"First, we were thinking, 'This can't be. This can't be possible. There's no way this can be what it looks like,'" Kevin R. Arrigo, a biological oceanographer at Stanford University in California and lead author of the study, told CBCNews.ca. "Then the next thing was: 'Has anybody seen this before?'"
Arrigo and his colleagues had certainly never seen anything like it on past Arctic expeditions.
"Typically, what we find when we sample the ice is that occasionally, there's things inside the ice, but there's almost no biology below the ice," Arrigo explained in a separate interview on the website of the journal Science, where his team's findings were published last week.
"The ice is a real effective barrier to light, and, generally, things just can't grow underneath it."
But in recent years, Arctic ice has been thinning and receding because of climate change, and the thriving algae blooms could be one consequence of that change. Phytoplankton are single-celled organisms that although technically not plants, behave like plants, transforming carbon dioxide into sugars and other molecules that feed an entire marine food chain. Different species of it are found all over the world although the polar species that Arrigo and his colleagues found is adapted to the cold conditions of the Arctic and is only found there.
Phytoplankton and the process of photosynthesis they carry out support entire microbial communities within their blooms, organisms such as ciliates, protozoa and zooplankton that in turn feed other animals.
Water appears clear and blue in parts of the Arctic ocean that can't sustain phytoplankton. In this screenshot from a video shot in the Chukchi Sea, a research instrument is seen being tugged up to the surface. Water appears clear and blue in parts of the Arctic ocean that can't sustain phytoplankton. In this screenshot from a video shot in the Chukchi Sea, a research instrument is seen being tugged up to the surface. (Gert van Dijken)
The tiny algae are a key part of a complex food chain that could be altered significantly if, indeed, the thinning of the Arctic sea ice is causing algae blooms to become more abundant and appear earlier in the year since many Arctic animals organize their migrations and life cycles around the times when food is most abundant.
"If it turns out because this ice is retreating, because the ice is melting and thinning, that these blooms are happening earlier and earlier in the season, it may make it more and more difficult for these organisms to adapt and to make sure that they can time themselves so that they are there when the food is most plentiful," Arrigo said in the Science interview.

Research part of broader Arctic expedition

Arrigo and his team came across the blooms in July 2011 while in the Arctic as part of a broader research project known as ICESCAPE (Impacts of Climate on EcoSystems and Chemistry of the Arctic Pacific Environment).
Water murky from the algae growing within it is seen in this screenshot from a video taken by an underwater camera lowered below the Arctic sea ice. Water murky from the algae growing within it is seen in this screenshot from a video taken by an underwater camera lowered below the Arctic sea ice. (Gert van Dijken)
As their research vessel travelled through the Chukchi Sea between Alaska and Russia, it broke up the retreating ice pack, and the scientists were able to take water samples from different depths below the ice. They found massive blooms of phytoplankton not just growing but thriving under the ice and extending far along its underside.
On average, they found four times as much algae underneath the ice as in open water.
What surprised them was not just the amount but also that the algae was most abundant close to the bottom of the ice layer.
Usually, algae blooms are found at depths of about 25 to 30 metres below the surface, Arrigo said, but the scientists measured blooms as close as two metres below the ice surface, near the interface of the bottom of the ice layer and the water underneath.
The ice itself was between 0.8 metres to 1.3 metres thick , and the blooms beneath it extended to variable depths — anywhere from about 30 metres to 70 metres below the surface of the ice.
ICESCAPE researchers pretend to pull the huge U.S. Coast Guard vessel that ferried them out into the Arctic. Ocean The algae analysis was just one tiny part of the extensive research the scientists did on their 2011 trip.ICESCAPE researchers pretend to pull the huge U.S. Coast Guard vessel that ferried them out into the Arctic. Ocean The algae analysis was just one tiny part of the extensive research the scientists did on their 2011 trip. (Gert van Dijken)
Also surprising was how far laterally the blooms extended underneath the ice pack. In the samples that Arrigo and his team took, the blooms extended for the full more than 100 kilometre stretch of the ice pack they measured.
"Normally, you find blooms along the edge of the ice," Arrigo told CBCNews.ca. "But it wasn't until we got, literally, into the ice that the concentrations got really high.
"Usually, phytoplankton don't grow until the ice goes away, and as soon as the ice goes away, you get enough light, and you get these blooms right along the edge of the ice, but that's not what happened at all in this case."
Two of Arrigo's main fellow algae researchers on the trip were Donald K. Perovich of the Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory and the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College, both in New Hampshire; and Robert S. Pickart of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts.
(For a full list of study authors, see article abstract.)
Arrigo was primarily in charge of analyzing the water column while Perovich oversaw sea ice operations and Pickart analyzed the data from a physical oceanographer's perspective.

Ideal habitat

When the scientists measured how much carbon dioxide the phytoplankton were photosynthesizing, they found that the algae blooms that were growing underneath the ice, where there is less light and water is colder, were growing twice as fast and were 10 times as productive as algae in open water.
'We know 25-30 years ago … there wouldn't have been enough light being transmitted to the ocean to get a bloom then.'— Kevin R. Arrigo, Stanford University
Arrigo suspects that's because the unique environment under the ice is the ideal habitat for polar phytoplankton, which are used to frigid temperatures and low light.
"If you look at the surface layer of the open ocean, phytoplankton are inhibited up there, because there's too much visible light, and there's ultraviolet radiation, too, which inhibits growth of the phytoplankton in the surface layer," he said.
"The ice is sort of filtering all that out, so we don't have too much light, we don't have any UV — the perfect recipe."
There are three key ingredients in this perfect recipe that have to be present in order for algae blooms to grow under Arctic sea ice:
  • The ice must be of the thin first-year variety formed over one year rather than the thicker multi-year ice that accumulates over several years and never completely melts. First-year ice in the Arctic is anywhere from 0.5 metres to 1.8 metres while the multi-year ice pack is between two metres and four metres thick.
  • The ice must have melt ponds, areas of sea ice where the top layer of snow has melted and formed pools of water that allow about three times more light to reach the water underneath the ice than areas without melt ponds.
  • The water below the ice must be rich in nutrients, which are plentiful in the area of the Chukchi Sea where Arrigo and his team were exploring.
Owing to climate change, more and more of the Arctic Ocean is first-year ice rather than multi-year ice. In fact, Arrigo said his team didn't come across any multi-year ice at all in the Chukchi Sea during their voyage.
A crane lowers sample bottles into the Arctic Ocean to collect water from underneath the sea ice. A crane lowers sample bottles into the Arctic Ocean to collect water from underneath the sea ice. (Gert van Dijken)
This development means that the kind of blooms that Arrigo and his colleagues stumbled upon could become more common and could start appearing earlier in the year.
"We know 25-30 years ago, that exact same area where we made this discovery was three-metre thick ice, with a snow cover on top, probably not that many melt ponds, and there wouldn't have been enough light being transmitted to the ocean to get a bloom then.
"Since then, the Arctic has lost a lot of that thick, multi-year ice. It's mostly first-year ice now, which is a lot thinner."

Effect on food chain

It's hard to say how long these enormous algae blooms have thrived under Arctic sea ice because few researchers venture directly into the ice pack to take measurements, Arrigo said, and although some have measured high chlorophyll concentrations below the ice that might have indicated similar blooms as Arrigo and his colleagues found, Arrigo has yet to hit upon research that has described them as such.
The ICESCAPE research vessel cuts a path through the ice of the Chukchi Sea. The ICESCAPE research vessel cuts a path through the ice of the Chukchi Sea. (Gert van Dijken)
The researchers' next challenge will be to do a more exhaustive study dedicated solely to studying the blooms and their effect on the surrounding ecosystem.
"We want to figure out how widespread these really are," Arrigo said. "We also want to find out what their role is in terms of the ecology of this system, because we don't understand that all.
"What's happening to all the carbon that's being produced by these things? Where's it going? Who's eating it? Who's benefiting from these blooms, or who's maybe suffering from these blooms? So, there's a lot of questions to be asked now — and answered."