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Science Update

May 2020

 
 
 
 
ANTARCTICA NEW ZEALAND NEWS


COVID-19 

We hope you are staying safe while enjoying some of the freedoms associated with Level 2. Our Christchurch-based team is still largely working from home, with a return to the office on the horizon.

 

In terms of the season ahead, we are committed to keeping Antarctica COVID-19 free and are working through the operational impacts associated with that. We will talk to each of the Event Managers next week to discuss the impact of the constrained logistical environment on their Event plans. Thank you for bearing with us as we navigate these unprecedented times.



ANTARCTIC SCIENCE PLATFORM

The Modelling Hub, a collaboration between the Antarctic Science Platform, Victoria University of Wellington, NIWA and GNS Science, is taking advantage of the complementary expertise and capability of the organisations and the international leadership of their staff in areas of Antarctic climate change research and impacts on New Zealand.
 
The Hub is now well and truly in business, with the four new research fellows having begun their work over the last few months. The fellows, a diverse group of modelling experts, are led by the Future Projections Expert Group Chairs Associate Prof. Nick Golledge and Dr. Liz Keller.
 
Dr. Alexandra Gossart, a Regional Climate Modeller from Victoria University of Wellington, Dr. Mario Krapp, a data scientist from GNS, Dr. Alena Malyarenko, an ice cavity and ice shelf processes expert from NIWA and Dr. Angela Bahamondes Dominguez, a marine biogeochemical modeller also from NIWA will work collaboratively across the Platform projects. Due to current travel restrictions, Alexandra has begun her work from the UK and will join us here once entry into New Zealand is possible.
 
Also in the modelling space, the Sea Ice and Carbon Cycle Feedback Project Team is delighted to announce the appointment of Dr. Max Thomas who will work as a sea ice modelling research fellow at the University of Otago in a position jointly funded by the ASP and the Deep South National Science Challenge. Like Alexandra, Max will begin work from the UK. Max will be part of the Otago sea ice team, working closely with Inga Smith and providing a strong link between ASP and Deep South teams and research.
 
Welcome Professor Dutton
Over the past few weeks ASP researchers have been collaborating closely with Professor Andrea Dutton from the University of Wisconsin. Professor Dutton is a leading expert in past and present sea level change and polar ice sheet change. A Fulbright Scholar and McArthur Foundation Fellow, Professor Dutton is hosted by the Antarctic Research Centre as the current ST Lee Lecturer and has stayed in New Zealand during the COVID-19 outbreak with her family.
 
She is working with Nick Golledge, Richard Levy, Nancy Bertler and Tim Naish on past sea-level change and ice sheet dynamics with the ASP and NZ SeaRise Programme and an assessment of COVID-19 impacts on climate change trends. Listen to an interview with Kim Hill on Radio New Zealand earlier this month.
 

 

SCOTT BASE REDEVELOPMENT

Project User Group Workshops

The Scott Base Redevelopment team recently completed a second series of user group workshops as part of the developed design stage. This was an intense period of video-conferencing where the design team collaborated with a range of people familiar with living and working at Scott Base to refine the plans for the new base. Two days of the workshops were dedicated to reviewing plans for the science workspaces and laboratories.

 

We would like to thank everyone who attended the workshops for their valuable contributions. It was great to have such a strong presence from the science community.

 

 
 
 
 
Weddell seal near Scott Base. Photo: Rose Foster
 
 
 
 
ANTARCTICA IN THE NEWS
 

Last season, a television crew from What Now visited a number of science events around the Scott Base area. As a result, a new educational children’s series, Science on Ice, has been launched on TVNZ On Demand. You can view the episodes here. 

 

And Blake Ambassador, Rachel Worthington, has spoken about her first field season studying greenhouse gases in Dry Valley soils here.

 
 
 
 
RECENT PUBLICATIONS
 

Anderson, J.T.H., Wilson, G.S., Jones, R.S., Fink, D., and Fujioka, T. (2020). Ice surface lowering of Skelton Glacier, Transantarctic Mountains, since the Last Glacial Maximum: Implications for retreat of grounded ice in the western Ross Sea. Quaternary Science Reviews, 237, 106305. 

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2020.106305

Levy, J., Cary, S.C., Joy, K., and Lee, C.K. (2020). Detection and community-level identification of microbial mats in the McMurdo Dry Valleys using drone-based hyperspectral reflectance imaging. Antarctic Science. May: 1-5.
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0954102020000243

Alexander, K.A., Liggett, D., Leane, E., Nielsen H.E.F. Bailey, J.L., Brasier, M.J., and Haward M. (2020). What and who is an Antarctic ambassador? Polar Record. Published Online May 2020.
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0032247420000194

 
 
 
 

Early autumn colours. Photo: Rose Foster
 
 
 
 
OTHER NEWS

 

SCAR OPERATIONS
Although SCAR-COMNAP 2020 has been cancelled and the Secretariat offices at Scott Polar Research Institute are closed, activities are still on the go. Plans are underway to move key elements of the SCAR Open Science Conference online. This will be done through a combination of live-streaming during the week of the original OSC (3rd-7th August 2020) and recorded presentations.
 
If you have any questions, please get in touch here

 

RESEARCH SUPPORT GRANTS AVAILABLE

The Trans-Antarctic Association (NZ) provides small grants each year in support of Antarctic research and related activities conducted by New Zealand citizens or permanent residents.  Applications are now invited for a second round of funding from the Trans-Antarctic Association and Byrd Scholarship Trust.

Deadline for applications is Monday, June 15, 2020. Contact
Peter Barrett, Committee Convener, for further information and application forms.

 

Congratulations to grant recipients from the first funding round, March 2020:

Dr Gavin Dunbar, Victoria University of Wellington. $2000. Byrd Fellowship Trust

‘Pilot study to improve the quality of dating Antarctic sea floor sediment deposited over the last 450,000 years.’

Dr Alexis Marshall, University of Waikato. $4000.  Trans-Antarctic Association

‘First investigation of a microbial ecosystem under the Ross Ice Shelf through DNA and RNA analysis.’

 

RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS AVAILABLE NOW!
A number of research  fellowships are currently available, including:
  • Council of Managers of National Antarctic Programs (COMNAP) Antarctic Fellowship: applications are due 31 May 2020, click here for more information;
  • International Association of Antarctica Tour Operators (IAATO) fellowships: applications are due 31 May 2020, click here for more information;
  • Scientific Committee of Antarctic Research (SCAR) fellowships: applications are due 26 August 2020, click here for more information;
  • Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) Scientific Scholarship Scheme: applications due 1 October 2020, click here for more information
 

SPECIAL ISSUE - 'ATMOSPHERE'

A special issue of the open access journal Atmosphere on the subject 'Interactions between the Cryosphere and Climate (Change)' is looking for submissions.

The deadline is 9 September 2020. Click here for more information. 


SPECIAL ISSUE - 'POLAR BIOLOGY'
A special issue of Polar Biology on the subject 'Pathways and impacts of biotically-mediated marine and other stored nutrient transfer between polar ecosystems' is seeking submissions of both review articles and original papers on this topic.

When submitting a manuscript in Editorial Manager,  select the option: S.I .: Biotically-mediated nutrient-transfer. There is currently no deadline for these submissions.


CRYOSPHERE SYMPOSIUM 
An International Symposium on Ice, Snow, and Water in a Warming World, has been postponed and is now scheduled to take place in September 2020. Click here for further details. 


IPICS OPEN SCIENCE CONFERENCE
The International Partnership in Ice Core Sciences (IPICS) third Open Science Conference titled "Ice Core Science at the three Poles", has been postponed and is now scheduled to be held in October 2021. 

More information can be found here
 
 
 
 

If you have any news, updates, great images, or recent publications that you would like to feature in the monthly update, please send them to our Science Team.