In Antarctica, bugs are kings

Wed Jan 14, 2009 3:55pm GMT
 
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By Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent

ROTHERA BASE, Antarctica (Reuters) - Lurking among rocks on the Antarctic Peninsula, the most aggressive land predator on the frozen continent is on the prowl -- for microscopic prey.

Animals such as lions, crocodiles or snakes thrive elsewhere on the planet, but Antarctica's most fearsome land predator is a reddish bug.

The continent is best known for penguins, seals and whales, but all rely on the sea for food, unlike its Lilliputian land-based creatures and plants -- so far almost unaffected by humans.

Scientists are stepping up their study of these tiny creatures in Antarctica for possible early warnings about how climate change may disrupt life around the planet in coming decades.

"Antarctica is strikingly different to other continents in terms of what you find on land," Pete Convey, a biologist at the British Antarctic Survey, said while peering at an apparently barren pile of rocks on the Antarctic Peninsula.

"There are no land mammals, there are no grazing animals like gazelles, no land birds," he told Reuters near the British Rothera Base.

One of the first rocks he picked up had a tiny, reddish mite racing around the surface.

"It's the lion of the ecosystem -- it's the top predator," he said of the Rhagidia mite, about 1 mm (0.04 inch) across. The mites have eight legs and are related to spiders.   Continued...

 
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