Living Large, Facing Heat: Adaptation, Acclimation, and Vulnerability of Antarctic Marine Invertebrates - Livestream
The Southern Ocean surrounding Antarctic contains the coldest and most thermally stable waters on Earth, and supports a diverse and highly endemic fauna that has evolved under these conditions for millions of years. Many unusual phenomena like gigantism, anti-freeze capacity, extraordinarily long development, and stenothermality have been described in Antarctic marine ecotherms; however, the region’s remoteness, harsh environmental conditions, and long periods of seasonal ice cover make it a challenging environment to study. This talk presents findings from over a decade of research beneath Antarctic ice, focusing on stenothermality, the evolutionary drivers of polar gigantism, and the capacity of Antarctic marine invertebrates to cope with changing oceans.
Speaker: Amy Moran, University of Hawai'i
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Editor's note: we incorrectly listed this event for May 21. This is the correct date.
Wednesday, 11/05/25
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