News Release

Captain Scott's Discovery expedition offers climate change insight 100 years on

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Taylor & Francis Group

Image 2 Dr. Anne D. Jungblut is Collecting Cyanobacteria Samples

image: Dr. Anne D. Jungblut is collecting cyanobacteria samples on the McMurdo Ice Shelf, Antarctica. view more 

Credit: Taylor & Francis

Samples collected during Captain Scott's famous 1901-1904 Discovery expedition to Antarctica, the oldest of their kind, have recently undergone new analysis using modern techniques providing scientists with exciting new data, over 100 years after the voyage.

The new analysis, published in the European Journal of Phycology, was undertaken by scientists at the Natural History Museum, University of Dundee (UK) and the Brain Chemistry Labs (USA) to evaluate the presence of cyanotoxins - the toxins produced by bacteria called cyanobacteria. The samples were taken at a time when Antarctica which was largely unaffected by human activity, unlike the current landscape which will see drastically altered temperatures affecting the delicate ecosystem in the future.

Researchers studying the 100-year-old samples of cyanobacteria from Captain Scott's expedition found that they provide an essential baseline for levels of cyanotoxins in Antarctic freshwater, prior to human activity. This discovery enables scientists to determine the effects of climate change on blue-green algae and their toxins in Antarctica.

Researcher and lead author Dr. Anne Jungblut, from the Natural History Museum in London, said: "The results will help experts to study the effects of climate change on blue-green algae and their toxins in Antarctica, now and in the future. They also highlight the significant past, present, and future contributions of the scientists that were the backbone of Captain Scott's Discovery expedition.

These historic samples from the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration, and our work on them 100 years later, demonstrate the value and the ongoing importance of Captain R.F. Scott's scientific legacy for current science challenges in Antarctica."

Captain Scott's famous expedition was one of the first to explore the Antarctic region, and resulted in many new advances in the fields of biology, zoology and geology. As new analytical advances are discovered, such as those which were used in this study, the ongoing importance of the voyage in tackling current science challenges in Antarctica is increasingly evident and it is likely there will be many more discoveries made from their collection of samples.

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Further information

For an interview, please contact:


Lead author, Dr. Anne D. Jungblut
Email: a.jungblut@nhm.ac.uk

For other queries:

Krystina Sihdu, Press & Media Relations Executive
Email: newsroom@taylorandfrancis.com
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The journal article will be online and freely available after the embargo is lifted. Please include the below link in your news report:

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09670262.2018.1442587?utm_source=newsroom&utm_medium=publicity&utm_campaign=JMR04738

Additional Information

Images can be found here:

1) Herbarium specimen of freshwater cyanobacterial mat communities collected on the McMurdo Ice Shelf, Antarctica during Captain Scott's Discovery Expedition in December 1902. https://www.dropbox.com/s/deqg2rrbu4xu5zp/1.jpeg?dl=0

2) Dr Anne D. Jungblut is collecting cyanobacteria samples on the McMurdo Ice Shelf, Antarctica. https://www.dropbox.com/s/h661k0gzkrx45n9/2.jpg?dl=0

3) Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) dominated microbial mat communities cover the floor of meltwater pond on the McMurdo Ice Shelf, Antarctica. The ponds have liquid water in summer and freeze to the bottom in winter. The environmental conditions are extreme and only microbial life can thrive in these unique Antarctic ecosystems. Cyanobacteria dominated microbial mat communities have many adaptation mechanisms such as the production of orange pigments that are UV screens. https://www.dropbox.com/s/d1g78mzmykvjd9u/3.jpg?dl=0

4) The Discovery Hut on Ross Island with the US Antarctic McMurdo station in the background. https://www.dropbox.com/s/xb4q5v9qlj1f6hw/4.jpg?dl=0

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