British academic discovers diverse 'rich' communities of algae while on Antarctic mission

A glacial microbiologist has uncovered "surprisingly rich" communities of microscopic algae in one of Earth's most isolated regions. Dr Emily Broadwell spent three months on Signy Island in Antarctica investigating rare snow and glacier algae as part of her doctoral research at the University of Bristol. Her analysis revealed "unique algal communities" across various ice and snow surfaces, upending the assumption that Antarctic glacier ecosystems will react uniformly to rising global temperature