Ross Sea

Image © Orcas in the Ross Sea Polynya | John Weller

The incredible productivity of Antarctica’s largest polynya fuels an incomparable ecosystem in the Ross Sea, supporting 33% of the world’s Adélie penguins, 25% of emperor penguins, 45% of Weddell seals, 50% of South Polar skuas, and 40% of Antarctic petrels. The Ross Sea is one the planet’s true biotic hotspots.
Dr. David Ainley
HT Harvey & Associates

The Polynya and Ross Sea Ecosystem

Adélie penguin on sea ice, Ross Sea · John Weller
Adélie penguin swimming, Ross Sea · John Weller
Emperor penguin, Ross Sea · John Weller
Emperor and Adélie penguins, Ross Sea · John Weller
John Weller
Ross Sea phytoplankton bloom · NASA
Colonies of Phaeocystis antarctica photographed under 10x magnification · John Weller
Minke whale in the Ross Sea · John Weller
Emperor penguins and minke whale · John Weller
Emperor penguins and icebergs, Ross Sea · John Weller
Emperor penguin colony, Ross Sea · John Welle
Emperor penguin chicks, Ross Sea · John Weller
Weddell Seal, Ross Sea · John Weller
Adélie penguin and chick, Ross Sea · John Weller
Adélie penguin colony, Ross Sea · John Weller
Adélie penguins on ice edge, Ross Sea · John Weller
Emperor Penguins diving off the ice edge, Ross Sea · John Weller
Orca family · John Weller
Adélie penguins on broken sea ice, Ross Sea · John Weller
Broken sea ice logjam, Ross Sea · John Weller

After nearly five months of winter’s continual night, the first rays of sunlight reach the surface of the ocean in the Ross Sea polynya. In that massive pool of open water, with its upwelling of nutrients, a floating forest of microscopic phytoplankton blooms as the sun rises in the spring. The bloom in the Ross Sea Polynya is so large and dense that it can be seen from Space. This abundance makes its way up the food chain, and the explosion of life in the Ross Sea must be seen to be believed.

Protection Now and Into the Future

Map of Ross Sea Marine Protected Area, Signed by CCAMLR Delegates · John Weller

The Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Living Resources, made up of 24 (now 26) countries and the EU, adopted the Ross Sea Marine Protected Area in 2016 by unanimous consensus. It is the largest marine protected area in the world, and the first large-scale international MPA. It was an historic achievement.

The MPA is in effect until 2052, at which time it must again be adopted by consensus. And so our commitment to the Ross Sea must continue, and increase.

We must do the science to study the effectiveness of the MPA and involve scientists from all over the globe. The Ross Sea is crucial for Antarctic biology today, and projections using state-of-the-art Earth system models show that it will remain a globally important ecological hotspot well into the future. It is a vital refuge for Antarctic life, especially in an increasingly warming world. It is also a model of how to protect international spaces. It’s up to us to ensure its continued protection.

The Ross Sea Polynya, Cassandra Brooks and John Weller

10 free trees if you sign up today

Save the planet every month with our membership

Grow your own forests and reefs

Remove plastic and carbon pollution

See your impact in a personal dashboard

Invite friends to plant with you

100% of funds go to projects