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Antarctic krill

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A close-up photograph of an Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba), showing its compound eye, feeding basket, and other anatomical features. This image is useful for learning about marine life and biology.

Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) is a small type of krill that lives in the cold waters of the Antarctic in the Southern Ocean. These tiny crustacean creatures grow up to about 6 centimetres long.

Antarctic krill eat tiny plants called phytoplankton, which get their energy from the sun. By eating these plants, krill help move energy through the ocean’s ecosystem. They are very important for many other animals that depend on them for food.

Even though krill are small, there are large numbers of them in the Antarctic. People have been catching krill for food, which is causing some concern about their future numbers.

Life cycle

The eggs are spawned close to the surface and start sinking. In the open ocean they sink for about 10 days: the nauplii hatch at around 3,000 metres (9,800 ft) depth

Antarctic krill have a special way of having babies. They lay eggs mostly from January to March. The male attaches something to the female. Females can lay many eggs at once. These eggs grow while sinking in the ocean.

After a few weeks, the eggs hatch into tiny larvae. These young krill move toward the surface. As they grow, they develop more legs and eyes. It takes two to three years for krill to become adults. Like many small sea animals, krill often shed their outer shell to keep growing.

Food

Antarctic krill have a transparent body, and you can often see their green stomachs. They mainly eat tiny plants called phytoplankton, especially very small diatoms. They use special legs to catch these plants from the water. Krill can also eat small animals like copepods, amphipods, and other tiny sea creatures called zooplankton.

Modified thoracopods that form the feeding basket of the filter apparatus move through the water to bring phytoplankton cells into the mouth.

In aquariums, krill have been seen eating one another. When they don’t get enough food, they get smaller after shedding their skin, which is unusual for animals their size.

Filter feeding

Antarctic krill feeding on ice algae. The surface of the ice on the left side is coloured green by the algae.

Main article: Filter feeder

Antarctic krill can eat tiny phytoplankton cells, which no other animal their size can do. They use their front legs to form a special basket that catches these tiny plants from the water.

In situ image taken with an ecoSCOPE. A green spitball is visible in the lower right of the image and a green fecal string in the lower left.

Ice-algae raking

Antarctic krill can scrape green ice algae from the bottom of pack ice. They have special rows of tiny bristles on their legs that help them graze the ice.

Biological pump and carbon sequestration

Krill make daily trips from the surface to depths of about 100 m. They often spit out groups of phytoplankton cells. They also produce waste that contains carbon and the glass-like shells of diatoms. Both sink quickly into the deep ocean. This process, called the biological pump, helps store carbon dioxide for about 1,000 years in the deep waters around Antarctica.

Biology

Krill are sometimes called light-shrimp because they can produce light through special organs on their bodies. These organs are found on different parts of a krill, such as near its eyes and along its body. They shine a yellow-green light for a few seconds at a time, and scientists think these lights might help hide the krill from animals that want to eat them.

Watercolour of bioluminescent krill

Krill can move very quickly to escape from animals that want to eat them. They flip their bodies and swim backward fast.

The genetic code of Antarctic krill is one of the largest known, with a lot of repeated information. Scientists have identified many genes in this code.

Geographic distribution

Krill distribution on a NASA SeaWIFS image – the main concentrations are in the Scotia Sea at the Antarctic Peninsula

Antarctic krill live all around the Southern Ocean, stretching as far north as the Antarctic Convergence. This area is huge—65 times the size of the North Sea! In winter, most of it is covered in ice, but in summer, a lot of it becomes ice-free.

The Southern Ocean has currents that flow around Antarctica. These currents help krill move around, allowing them to mix with krill from other areas.

Ecology

Antarctic krill is a key part of the Antarctic ecosystem. It is an important food source for many animals, including whales, seals such as leopard seals, fur seals, and crabeater seals, squid, icefish, penguins, albatrosses, and many other birds. Antarctic krill feeds on tiny plants called phytoplankton, which get their energy from the sun. This makes krill an important link in the food chain.

The krill lives only in the Southern Ocean, where it forms large groups called swarms.

Temperature and pack ice area over time, after data compiled by Loeb et al. 1997. The scale for the ice is inverted to demonstrate the correlation; the horizontal line is the freezing point—the oblique line the average of the temperature.

Changes in the environment, such as less ice in the ocean, may affect krill populations in the future. Scientists are watching these changes closely because krill plays an important role in the Antarctic food web.

Biomass and production

Decline with shrinking pack ice

Ocean acidification

Fisheries

Main article: Krill fishery

Viruses

Images

A close-up view of Antarctic krill showing its light organ, nerves, and filtering structures – a fascinating look at this tiny ocean creature!
Animation showing how Antarctic krill quickly flip to escape from danger in the water.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Antarctic krill, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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