Updated 20 December 2025 at 16:52 IST

Rare Photos Show Life Thriving in a Remote Corner of Antarctica as Climate Threats Grow

Amid the roaring waves and serene vistas of the Southern Ocean, a boat of hopeful tourists scans for orcas, seals, and penguins.

Follow : Google News Icon  
Photos Show Life Thriving in a Remote Corner of Antarctica as Climate Threats Grow
Photos Show Life Thriving in a Remote Corner of Antarctica as Climate Threats Grow | Image: AP

Antarctica: The Southern Ocean is one of the most remote places on Earth, but that doesn’t mean it is tranquil. Tumultuous waves that can swallow vessels ensure that the Antarctic Peninsula has a constant drone of ocean. While it can be loud, the view is serene — at first glance, it is only deep blue water and blinding white ice.

Several hundred metres (yards) off the coast emerges a small boat with a couple dozen tourists in bright red jackets. They are holding binoculars, hoping for a glimpse of the orcas, seals and penguins that call this tundra home.

A elephant seal reacts at Walker Island in Antarctica

They are in the Lemaire Channel, nicknamed the “Kodak Gap”, referring to the film and camera company, because of its picture-perfect cliffs and ice formations. This narrow strip of navigable water gives anybody who gets this far south a chance to see what is at stake as climate change, caused mainly by the burning of oil, gas and coal, leads to a steady rise in global average temperatures.

The Antarctic Peninsula stands out as one of the fastest warming places in the world. The ocean that surrounds it is also a major repository for carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that contributes to warming. It captures and stores roughly 40% of the CO2 emitted by humans, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Advertisement
Gentoo penguins prepare to enter the water at Walker Island in Antarctica

On a recent day, Gentoo penguins, who sport slender, orange beaks and white spots above their eyes, appeared to be putting on a show. They took breaks from their dives into the icy water to nest on exposed rock. As the planet warms, they are migrating farther south. They prefer to colonise rock and fish in open water, allowing them to grow in population.

The Adelie penguins, however, don’t have the same prognosis. The plump figures with short flippers and wide bright eyes are not able to adapt in the same way.

Advertisement
Gentoo penguins nest at Walker Island in Antarctica

By 2100, 60% of Adelie penguin colonies around Antarctica could be threatened by warming, according to one study. They rely on ice to rest and escape predators. If the water gets too warm, it will kill off their food sources. From 2002 to 2020, roughly 149 billion metric tonnes of Antarctic ice melted per year, according to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

Passengers walk inside the volcano at Deception Island in Antarctica

For tourists, Antarctica is still a giant, glacial expanse that is home to only select species that can tolerate such harsh conditions. For example, in the Drake Passage, a dangerous strip of tumultuous ocean, tourists stand in wonder while watching orca whales swim in the narrow strip of water and Pintado petrels soar above.

The majestic views in Antarctica, however, will likely be starkly different in the decades ahead. The growing Gentoo penguin colonies, the shrinking pieces of floating ice and the increasing instances of exposed rock in the Antarctic Peninsula all underscore a changing landscape.

A pod of orcas swim in the Drake Passage en route to Antarctica

ALSO READ: NASA’s Parker Solar Probe Captures Solar Wind Making a U-Turn Toward the Sun

Published By : Vanshika Punera

Published On: 20 December 2025 at 16:52 IST