Goals of ANTOS:
ANTOS is being designed to be of interest to all national programmes. Its goals are to:
- Establish an observation network of representative core ‘nodal’
sites in the terrestrial and nearshore environments around Antarctica
and the sub-Antarctic;
- Measure parameters long term that will enhance understanding of biological response to environmental change;
- Stimulate the development of new observation technologies, data capture, and data sharing;
- Encourage buy-in and involvement of all national programmes through a
‘tiered observation network’ that requires varying levels of
resourcing, logistic and scientific capabilities;
- Provide opportunity for alignment of national and international
programmes and projects, and an observational platform to underpin SCAR
science activities;
- Provide information to assist evidence-based conservation and policy decisions.
An implementation plan was developed at the ANTOS Workshop in August 2015 which outlined the configuration philosophy:
- ANTOS should be of interest to all national programmes.
Consequently, the design includes a three-tiered approach, from basic
and relatively inexpensive to more complex and more expensive.
- At least one site in each of the Antarctic and Sub-Antarctic Conservation Biogeographic Regions
is planned to begin to meet the goal of wide spatial coverage, forming
the basis of ANTOS core ‘nodal sites’. Within sites, data will be
collected, ranging from simple to more complex relating to scientific
questions and instrumentation with installations.
- At all levels of surveillance, biologically relevant attributes of change will be made within six broad criteria:
physical environment, colonisation, diversity, distribution, function,
and genetics. These criteria were chosen as they encompass desirable
parameters required for detecting, understanding, and interpreting
change in both marine and terrestrial systems.
- Ideally, all ANTOS installations within ANTOS sites should be identical in design and makeup
(for marine and terrestrial, respectively). Instrumentation used needs
to measure a suite of agreed parameters at the specified resolution and
temporal scale so that data can be harmonised and usefully compared.
- Widespread engagement with ANTOS is key.
The success of ANTOS will be measured by the continental coverage and
national programme participation, and by long-term sustainability of the
monitoring effort. The workshop participants felt that the highly
comparable data collected will not only be immediately important at
local scales, but will become increasingly valued as the most
comprehensive continental scale long-term data set of its kind on
Earth.
Following the period of development of the ANTOS concept since 2014
as an Action Group, in 2016 ANTOS applied successfully to become an
Expert Group within SCAR. This ensures that long-term status is
confirmed, with a lifetime of eight years, as the Group moves from
development towards implementation.
|