January 25, 2026
Iceberg A-23A has
had a more eventful run than most of the large Antarctic icebergs that have
calved from the continent's ice shelves in recent decades. Over its winding, forty-plus-year journey, the
"megaberg" spent decades grounded in the Weddell Sea before drifting north, twirling in an ocean vortex for months, and nearly colliding with an island in 2025.
By 2026, the iconic iceberg, sopping
with meltwater and shedding smaller bergs as it moved into warmer ocean waters,
put on one more show. The chunks of ice and frigid glacial meltwater left in
its wake appear to have fueled a surge in phytoplankton abundance, known as a bloom,
observed in surface waters by NASA satellites.
Phytoplankton, which harvest sunlight to
carry out photosynthesis, form the base of the marine food web. They also
produce up to half of the oxygen on Earth and serve
as part of the ocean’s “biological carbon pump,” which transfers carbon dioxide from the atmosphere to the deep
ocean.
The VIIRS (Visible Infrared Imaging
Radiometer Suite) on the Suomi NPP satellite captured this image (left) of the splintering tabular berg on January 25, 2026. The image was acquired after several large
pieces had drifted northwestward and then curled toward the northeast following
the iceberg breaking apart on January 9. A debris field full of brash ice, small icebergs, and bergy bits was visible east of the largest remaining pieces. Also on January
25, the OCI (Ocean Color Instrument) on NASA’s PACE (Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, Ocean
Ecosystem) satellite detected plumes of chlorophyll-a (right) drifting around the
remaining bergs and debris field. Researchers use chlorophyll concentrations as
a marker of phytoplankton abundance.
January 25, 2026
"This bloom is too big and too
clearly spreading from the icebergs not to be strongly linked to them,"
said Grant Bigg, an emeritus oceanographer at the University of Sheffield.
Bigg, who has studied how large icebergs have enhanced
phytoplankton activity in this region,
noted that while blooms unconnected to icebergs do occur regularly here,
satellite imagery shows a connection that has persisted for weeks—increasing
his confidence that the iceberg and phytoplankton bloom are related.
The primary factors that limit
phytoplankton in this region are access to light and nutrients, explained Heidi
Dierssen, an oceanographer at the University of Connecticut. Light can be
limiting even in the summer because phytoplankton are often mixed too deeply in
the water column due to high winds and turbulence.
Melting icebergs can boost phytoplankton
by both creating a stable surface layer with favorable growth conditions and
releasing plumes of meltwater rich in iron—a key nutrient for phytoplankton
that can be scarce in this part of the South Atlantic, she said. Research indicates that icebergs also often
contain significant amounts of manganese and macronutrients, such as nitrates
and phosphates, that can benefit phytoplankton. These nutrients often
accumulate on icebergs when they were part of the larger ice sheet through
windblown dust or through contact with bedrock or soil.
The Landsat 8 image above, captured by the OLI (Operational Land Imager) on
January 25, 2026, shows blue meltwater pooling on several of the larger
fragments. The linear patterns are likely related to striations that were etched hundreds of years ago when the ice was part of a
glacier moving across Antarctic bedrock. Dark staining, perhaps cryoconite dust, is visible on some of the bergs.
Bigg
also noted that the phytoplankton signal appears to be more concentrated near
the smaller bergs, possibly because these are melting faster, releasing
nutrient-rich material at a higher rate. Dierssen added that it's also possible
that chlorophyll concentrations may be higher near the largest bergs than they
appear because algorithms sometimes overcorrect for "adjacency effects" near
bright surfaces, like ice, when processing chlorophyll data.
Ivona
Cetinić, a researcher on NASA's PACE science team, checked a database for clues about
the smallest, or "pico," phytoplankton swirling around the bergs. The
tool, called MOANA (Multiple Ordination ANAlysis), taps into hyperspectral satellite observations of ocean color from
PACE.
MOANA
indicated that picoeukaryotic phytoplankton—microscopic eukaryotic organisms that respond quickly to
changes in temperature or nutrient availability—were thriving in these waters
when the image was captured. The swirls to the west of the berg were made of a
slightly larger group of cyanobacteria called Synechococcus, she said. The PACE
team is currently developing additional tools that will help identify
communities of larger types of phytoplankton, which were likely present as
well.
Some research suggests
that icebergs may have contributed significantly to phytoplankton blooms in
this region in recent years, possibly accounting for up to one-fifth of the
Southern Ocean's total carbon sequestration.
Other research teams have concluded that surface waters trailing icebergs were
about one-third more likely to have increased amounts
of phytoplankton compared to background levels.
How
long Iceberg A-23A will enhance phytoplankton productivity before and after
disintegrating completely remains an open question. NASA scientists watching
the berg say it continued to shrink and shed mass in February, but as of March 3, 2026, it
remained just slightly above the size threshold required
for naming and tracking by the U.S. National Ice Center.
Past
research indicates that icebergs can sustain elevated chlorophyll
concentrations for more than a month after passing through in trails that
stretch for hundreds of kilometers. Icebergs and the blooms surrounding them
have also been known to attract fish, seabirds, and other types of marine life, highlighting the important ecological
role they play.
NASA Earth Observatory images by Michala Garrison, using VIIRS data from NASA EOSDIS LANCE, GIBS/Worldview, and the Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership, PACE data from the NASA Ocean Biology Distributed Active Archive Center OB.DAAC, and Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey. Story by Adam Voiland.
Source: Ailing "Megaberg" Sparks Surge of Microscopic Life - NASA Science



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