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Keywords
Biodiversity
Corals
Day
KWCI (GPI)
Protect the Antarctic (campaign title)
Research
Rocks
Samples
A Dropstone collected off Brabant Island in the Antarctic
A dropstone specimen collected from a dive with a submarine in Chiriguano bay, south of Brabante Island in Gerlache Strait, the Antarctic. Stones dropped by glaciers and icebergs – termed dropstones – provide a hard substrate for organisms to attach to. Attached to this dropstone are a variety of bryozoan and hydroid species, bottle-brush primnoid corals (Thourella sp.), hexactinellid glass sponges and yellow colonial ascidians.
Greenpeace is conducting scientific research and documenting the Antarctic’s unique wildlife, to strengthen the proposal to create the largest protected area on the planet, an Antarctic Ocean Sanctuary.
Unique identifier:
GP0STRIYC
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
25/01/2018
Locations:
Antarctic
,
Brabant Island
,
Gerlache Strait
Credit line:
© Christian Åslund / Greenpeace
Size:
8018px × 5345px 15MB
Ranking:
★★★★★★ (B)
Containers
Shoot:
Antarctic Ship Tour - Leg One - Photos by Christian Åslund
Greenpeace is on a three-month expedition to the Antarctic to carry out scientific research, including seafloor submarine dives and sampling for plastic pollution, to highlight the urgent need for the creation of a 1.8 million square kilometre Antarctic Ocean Sanctuary to safeguard species like whales and penguins.
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