Antarctica is turning GREEN: Vegetation cover has increased more than tenfold over the last 40 years – with climate change to blame

If you were asked to visualise Antarctica, it’s likely a vast white landscape would spring to mind.

But a concerning new study might have you rethinking that image in your head.

If you were asked to visualise Antarctica, it's likely a vast white landscape would spring to mind. But a concerning new study might have you rethinking that image in your head. Pictured: a WorldView-2 Satellite Image of Robert Island (top) and the same image after the analysis, showing areas of vegetated land in bright green (bottom)

Experts from the universities of Exeter and Hertfordshire have warned that Antarctica is turning green – with climate change to blame.

Their analysis shows that vegetation cover across the Antarctic Peninsula has increased more than tenfold over the last four decades.

‘Our findings raise serious concerns about the environmental future of the Antarctic Peninsula, and of the continent as a whole,’ said Dr Thomas Roland, who led the study.

Previous studies have shown that, like many polar regions, the Antarctic Peninsula is warming faster than the global average. Pictured: Green Island

Previous studies have shown that, like many polar regions, the Antarctic Peninsula is warming faster than the global average.

In their new study, the researchers set out to understand how much of the area has ‘greened’ in response to this warming.

The team analysed satellite images taken across the Peninsula over the last 40 years.

The team analysed satellite images taken across the Peninsula over the last 40 years, and found that vegetation cover has increased significantly

Back in 1986, the images show that just one square kilometre of the Peninsula was covered with vegetation.

However, by 2021, this area had increased to almost 12 square kilometres.

Speaking to MailOnline, Dr Roland explained that while simple before-and-after pH๏τos would be ‘impactful’, they were not possible.

Back in 1986, just one square kilometre of the Peninsula was covered with vegetaion. However, by 2021, this area had increased to almost 12 square kilometres. Pictured: Norsel Point

‘Sadly we only have “very high resolution” images from 2013 and 2016,’ he said.

‘Whilst the increases in vegetation we observe over this short window are in line with our overall greening trend (1986-2021) the visual difference is not that remarkable!

‘In turn, a single image from the coarser resolution satellite we use for the main study (where we have hundreds of images over the full 35 year period), I suspect, would not be perceived as good enough “quality” as to be impactful.’

Greening accelerated by over 30 per cent in recent years (2016-2021) relative to the full study period (1986-2021) ¿ expanding by over 400,000 square metres per year in this period. Pictured: Barrientos Island

The study also found that the greening is happening quicker and quicker.

Greening accelerated by over 30 per cent in recent years (2016-2021) relative to the full study period (1986-2021) – expanding by over 400,000 square metres per year in this period.

‘The plants we find on the Antarctic Peninsula – mostly mosses – grow in perhaps the harshest conditions on Earth,’ said Dr Roland.

‘The landscape is still almost entirely dominated by snow, ice and rock, with only a tiny fraction colonised by plant life.

‘But that tiny fraction has grown dramatically – showing that even this vast and isolated ‘wilderness’ is being affected by anthropogenic climate change.’

Worryingly, the researchers say that as these ecosystems become more established and temperatures continue to rise, the extent of the greening will increase.

Experts from the universities of Exeter and Hertfordshire have warned that Antarctica is turning green - with climate change to blame. Pictured: Ardley Island

Dr Olly Bartlett, co-author of the study, said: ‘Soil in Antarctica is mostly poor or non-existent, but this increase in plant life will add organic matter, and facilitate soil formation – potentially paving the way for other plants to grow.

‘This raises the risk of non-native and invasive species arriving, possibly carried by eco-tourists, scientists or other visitors to the continent.’

Based on the findings, the team is calling for ‘urgent’ research into the specific mechanisms behind the greening trend.

‘The sensitivity of the Antarctic Peninsula’s vegetation to climate change is now clear and, under future anthropogenic warming, we could see fundamental changes to the biology and landscape of this iconic and vulnerable region,’ Dr Roland added.

‘In order to protect Antarctica, we must understand these changes and identify precisely what is causing them.’

Related Posts

Echoes in Stone: The Living Art of Arnhem Land

Echoes in Stone: The Living Art of Arnhem Land

On the sun-warmed sandstone walls of Arnhem Land in northern Australia, a profound and ancient story unfolds. Here, in a vast landscape of rugged cliffs and quiet…

The Silent Witness: An Iron Age Bog Body

In the peat bogs of Northern Europe, time has a way of preserving secrets. Beneath layers of moss, mud, and acidic water, archaeologists have discovered bodies so…

Echoes of Violence: The Anglo-Saxon Mᴀss Grave at Oxford

In 2009, during routine construction work near Oxford, England, archaeologists made a chilling discovery that would send ripples across the field of medieval archaeology. Beneath a quiet…

Frozen in Ash: The Eternal Victims of Pompeii

On a late summer day in 79 CE, the thriving Roman city of Pompeii was abruptly silenced. Mount Vesuvius, looming quietly to the north of the Bay…

Faces of Eternity: The Royal Mummies of Ancient Egypt

Among the most haunting yet captivating discoveries of Egyptology are the preserved remains of Egypt’s pharaohs and queens. The pH๏τograph of two mummies—remarkably lifelike in their stillness—brings…

Silent Witness of the Sands: The Pre-Dynastic Mummy of Egypt

In the arid expanse of the Libyan Desert, on the western edge of the Nile Valley, archaeologists uncovered a hauntingly preserved human body, dating back nearly 5,000–6,000…