How has the growing inclination among some commentators to interpret Antarctica through a security lens reshaped the policy landscape?
And is the security narrative itself a threat to Antarctic stability?
Discover more with our Antarctic governance experts:
tinyurl.com/58vxdt5c
Posts by Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies
"Rain, once rare in Antarctica, is becoming a force capable of reshaping life on the peninsula. Limiting warming to below 1.5°C won’t prevent these changes entirely. But it could slow how quickly rainfall transforms the frozen continent."
—@iceybethan.bsky.social
theconversation.com/rain-is-comi...
Lead technician Ben Quigley and Giant Crab. Credit: IMAS.
Lead technician Ben Quigley and Giant Crab. Credit: IMAS.
The fisher-operated imaging system, developed by IMAS researchers including lead technician Ben Quigley, is making it easier to capture crab length and sex. Photo: Adam Gibson
The fisher-operated imaging system, developed by IMAS researchers including lead technician Ben Quigley, is making it easier to capture crab length and sex. Photo: Adam Gibson
A stereoscopic camera system that mimics human vision, combined with AI, is transforming how scientists and industry collect important data on Giant Crabs across southern Australia. Giant crab fisheries lack consistent and representative length-frequency data. Read the story 👉 tinyurl.com/38w6fxe6
IMAS Executive Director Professor Nicole Webster, Dr Alison Turnbull, Associate Professor Scott Ling, Dr John Keane and Dr Sarah Ugalde. Credit: Nina Hamilton.
IMAS science has taken centre stage alongside industry at the 10th Tasmanian Seafood Awards. Two of our research teams have been recognised for their outstanding contributions after winning two awards.
Read the full story 👉 tinyurl.com/y6j3nxu5
📸 Nina Hamilton
It was an adventure of a lifetime for George Hamaty, who returned home after being aboard CSIRO research vessel Investigator researching life in the aftermath of Tonga’s explosive volcanic eruption. George joined the voyage as a co-biologist. Read about George's experience 👉 tinyurl.com/3c97pubc
Sea Change Australia has launched a national call for questions from the country’s seafood sector.
The call invites commercial and recreational fishers, aquaculture operators, processors, and supply chain workers to ask their most pressing questions about climate change and how to adapt.
QR code 👇
Aquaculture pens. Photo: Shutterstock
Scoop of fish feed. Photo: Shutterstock
An IMAS-led study reveals the environmental footprint of fish feeds depends more on where feed ingredients are sourced than on whether they are fish- or plant-based. It shows that knowing where & how ingredients are produced is key to reducing environmental footprint 🐠https://tinyurl.com/3fk5sjn9
The Guide to Environmental Monitoring and Assessment for Finfish Aquaculture is out now! It brings together scientific techniques for assessing how finfish aquaculture interacts with marine environments, from soft sediments & seagrass beds to inshore rocky reefs & deep reefs: tinyurl.com/8d7pes9x
Photos by Elliot Styles and Karina Sorrell
Seabirds foraging at sea face deadly threats from eating plastics & being caught up in fisheries bycatch. A new Honours study reveals colour influences their food choices, and avoiding preferred colours in items like fishing gear & weather balloons could prevent seabird deaths🪶 tinyurl.com/k29kxyh6
IMAS diver Tyson Bessell releasing handfish. Credit: Francisco Albergoli
Assoc Prof Andrew Trotter inspecting handfish before release into the wild. Credit: Jemina Stuart-Smith
Our super happy IMAS handfish dive & aquaculture team after releasing the 65 red handfish to the wild. Credit: Jeremy Smith
In a major step for marine conservation, IMAS scientists have released 65 captive-raised red handfish into the wild! It was an exciting moment after an incredible effort by many people over many years - and it's given the red handfish the best possible chance of survival: tinyurl.com/mpbyb56z
Two of our IMAS scientists will soon embark on a multi-year journey with other leading climate experts to draft the 7th #IPCC #climatereport. Profs Melissa Hart & Gretta Pecl will be lead authors for Working Group II: Impacts, Adaptation & Vulnerability 🪼 www.ipcc.ch/2025/08/18/pr-ar7-authors/ 🪸
Andrew Sullivan's research is part of an investigation into how countries are managing their ocean spaces
School of fish. Credit: Amanda Cotton | Ocean Image Bank
From the fjords of Norway to the reefs of Bali, Andrew Sullivan’s PhD with IMAS @utas.edu.au is taking him around the world as he investigates how nations are developing policy for a sustainable ocean - and it will help inform future ocean governance. Discover more: tinyurl.com/53xf5svj
1️⃣ "Antarctica might seem a long way away, but really the changes that happen there have consequences for everyone on the planet." — Nerilie Abram, AAD Chief Scientist, ABC Radio
🌊 Rising seas are a planetary impact of global heating. The contribution of melting ice in Antarctica is growing.
🎞️ NASA
2️⃣ But it's much more than sea-level rise.
" #Antarctica has long been seen as a remote, unchanging environment. Not any more. The ice-covered continent and the surrounding Southern Ocean are undergoing abrupt and alarming changes" — @aunz.theconversation.com
▶️ theconversation.com/from-sea-ice...
3️⃣ 'Emerging evidence of abrupt changes in the Antarctic environment' is published in nature.com today, led by @climatenerilie.bsky.social with authors from @antarcticsciaus.bsky.social, @arcsaef.bsky.social, AAD, @imas-utas.bsky.social, @ccrc.bsky.social & other key research groups.
▶️ rdcu.be/eBCJA
IMAS PhD candidate, Colette Appert trialling the best tag attachment on an adult Kerguelen Sandpaper Skate. (Photo: Jaimie Cleeland)
The Kerguelen Sandpaper Skate is native to Heard and McDonald Islands in the Southern Ocean, and its slow growth and maturation make it highly susceptible to fishing pressure. Photo: Measuring a deceased juvenile Skate by Colette Appert
Trialling a pop-up archival satellite tag attachment on the tail of a deceased Skate. (Photo: Colette Appert)
Deep-sea skates caught accidentally in Southern Ocean fisheries are usually released if they appear unharmed. But their chances of survival after release were unclear until now. IMAS PhD research shows only 1 in 4 survive, and it will improve skate bycatch mmt strategies doi.org/10.1098/rspb...
@utas.edu.au @sbtebbett.bsky.social @jpk-iii.bsky.social @reeflifesurvey.bsky.social
Urchin barrens in NE Tasmania. Credit: Matt Testoni IMAS
Urchin barrens in NE New Zealand. Credit: Crispin Middleton | SeacologyNZ
A Trans-Tasman collaboration between IMAS & @aucklanduni.bsky.social researchers shows Longspined Sea Urchins are a huge threat to NE #NewZealand marine ecosystems. And as the region is at lower latitudes, the impact there could outstrip what we've seen in #Tasmania.
Study: doi.org/10.1016/j.je...
How do international Antarctic partnerships benefit the life and work of researchers? IMAS/AAPP researcher Dr Alex Fraser said they are "a fantastic way to broaden collaborative networks, especially for young scientists."
❄️ tinyurl.com/suac8efs
@antarctic.bsky.social @utas.edu.au
"We are addressing a critical challenge": the future of marine ecosystem modelling 🐟 - @fishmarinemip.bsky.social
Find out what happens when dozens of marine ecosystem specialists from around the world come together ⬇️
@imas-utas.bsky.social | @utas.edu.au | @antarctic.bsky.social
bit.ly/4f3EaXD
#Antarctic sea ice is:
⚙️ a global climate engine
☂️ a cooling sunshade
🌀 a pumphouse for currents
🧊 a vast verandah for life
♻️ one of the largest seasonal cycles on Earth
🌬️ highly sensitive to climate variability
🌊 What happens when there's less sea ice?
aapp.shorthandstories.com/a-world-with...
Students using the microscope in the lab. Credit: Adam Gibson
Students using the microscope in the lab. Credit: Adam Gibson
Galapagos Sharks captured by IMAS researchers using baited remote under video (BRUV)
For Megan Chang, the Professional Masters stream at IMAS was an exciting pathway to a career in the aquaculture industry.
By turning recycled marine samples into a classroom resource, Megan Chang is creating educational tools for the next generation of fisheries scientists. Megan reused old research samples and materials, including underwater footage. See what she did 👉 tinyurl.com/mrx98y3b
A marine science pioneer, an emerging leader & a scientist with a passion for elevating Indigenous perspectives in marine conservation have taken centre stage as Australian Marine Sciences Association award recipients this year. Dive in to find out what inspires them - and us! tinyurl.com/5utrdvnj
Now is not the time to put funding on ice. Australian Antarctic field programs should be ambitious as the rule not the exception, writes Professor Matt King in today's Mercury Newspaper, republished here: tinyurl.com/2zhpbryk
@antarcticsciaus.bsky.social @utas.edu.au @deformedearth.bsky.social
Recent record summer lows in Antarctic sea ice are a window into a future warmer climate with more extreme events, but what impacts can we expect? New research clearly shows that faster action on climate change is vital to prevent even more drastic changes in the future: tinyurl.com/Low-summer-s...
Seas the opportunity 🚢 Applications for our 2026 CAPSTAN voyages are now open!
This exciting at-sea experience for university students & trainers is all happening aboard CSIRO's research vessel #RVInvestigator, with two voyage opportunities in 2026.
Apply now: www.csiro.au/capstan
🌏 climate history: AAPP has a key role in the Million Year Ice Core project with the Australian Antarctic Division — develop a state-of-the-art lab @imas-utas.bsky.social in Hobart to analyse the chemistry of air bubbles in ice cores retrieved from #Antarctica.
🧊 www.abc.net.au/news/2025-06...
IMAS / AAPP sea-ice researcher @edoddridge.bsky.social has been awarded the prestigious Dr Peter Smith Medal by The Royal Society of Tasmania, in recognition of his outstanding research on sea-ice changes around Antarctica.
✨Read more: tinyurl.com/5n93seke
📸 Credit Bernard Pryor OAM. @utas.edu.au
What can the ancient rocks in the Denman region tell us?
Go deeper with Prof Jo Whittaker (IMAS) and Dr Karin Orth (UTAS) to discover what lies beneath, and how ancient rocks hold vital clues about how fast the Denman Glacier is melting ❄️ @utas.edu.au
Underwater camera captures sea life. Credit: IMAS
Six actions for ecologists in times of planetary crisis infographic.
Diver among the seaweed. Credit: Scott Ling
IMAS and Centre for Marine Socioecology (CMS) Professor Gretta Pecl AM
Unprecedented biodiversity loss and climate collapse are threatening livelihoods across the globe. Ecologists have been critical to uncovering the drivers of biodiversity decline. A new study outlines six actions for ecologists in a time of global environmental crisis: tinyurl.com/5n874r97