Entry 8 Day 53  4 December 2024 57°32'31.2''S, 26°49'8.4''W Travelled: 11036.55 Nautical miles

57°32'31.2''S, 26°49'8.4''W Travelled: 11036.55 Nautical miles

Welcome to Signy Research Station

We’ve arrived at our first island station – Signy!

 

Signy Research Station is one of our smallest stations, and only has people living there during the Antarctic summer which is between October and April. Signy is one of the remote South Orkney Islands 600km away from the Antarctic Peninsula (almost as far as London to Edinburgh in the UK). 

A collection of light green buildings on the water's edge, with snow covered mountains behind
Mike Dunn

Signy Research Station in the snow

Did you know?

Around half the island is permanently covered by ice.

Derren Fox

The island has abundant wildlife and greenery – making it an ideal outdoor laboratory! Data has been collected about the wildlife here for decades – in fact, we’ve monitored the population size of the southern giant petrel since the 1960s. One in ten of the world’s population of these amazing birds live around Signy. 

Signy has a very special climate. In the winter, it’s essentially attached to the Antarctic mainland with sea ice, which means it is much colder than you might expect for an island (up to a chilly -39°) with clear skies (although regular storms pass through). In the summer, as the ice retreats, it has a more typical island climate, with warm and wet conditions and low clouds – the infamous ‘Signy mank’. 

A seal lying on mossy ground Derren Fox
A sleepy fur seal
Two penguins Derren Fox
A pair of chinstrap penguins

The scientists here focus on birds and ecosystems on land – from mosses and bacteria to mites! There’s lots of marine life around Signy – anemones, starfish, sea squirts and sponges – as well as lots of seal species. Weddell, elephant, leopard, crabeater and fur seals can all be spotted around the island.  

Did you know?

There are no native land vertebrates on Signy – only ones that mainly live in the ocean.

Want to explore Signy?

Have a walk around with this 3D tour of the station. 

Check out the 3D Tour – opens in new tab
A screenshot of the virtual visit platform

A quick pit stop… 

The route to Signy from Rothera was slow, as the ship had to manoeuvre through lots of sea ice. Along the way, the ship spotted a buoy on the sea ice, and made a quick detour to collect it. It’s important that we leave nothing but footprints in Antarctica, so the crew retrieved this ocean litter and will bring it back to the UK! 

A buoy, which is an orange ball covered in a net, lying on the sea ice, with a ship in the distance
Joe Laurance

A buoy stranded in sea ice

Get your walking boots on

We have some exciting science happening at Signy this year and it involves hiking around the island to get to the study sites.

Discovering diatoms 

Signy’s landscape is covered in lakes – there are 16 of them scattered across the island, with additional seasonal ones appearing and disappearing each year. In these lakes are something called diatoms – a kind of tiny algae (a type of plant).  

The type of diatoms that you find changes with the climate. And, by monitoring changes in the diatom communities, scientists are learning more about how Signy’s ecosystem is changing in response to climate change.   

Dazzling diatoms under a microscope

Plants and permafrost 

Scientists are trying to work out whether the climate and environmental changes seen over the past twenty years are making a difference to the plants, permafrost (a thick layer of soil below the surface, that is permanently frozen) and soils across the wider Antarctic peninsula.  

There are two native vascular plants (plants that have tissues to transport water and nutrients) on Signy Island and these have spread across the island over the past ten or so years. Researchers are conducting some long-term experiments to find out why, and to understand how much and how fast the permafrost is being lost. 

A panoramic photo of a deep green lake surrounded by low rocky mountains and low cloud
Derren Fox

Signy has 16 lakes across the island

Meet Signy’s Zoological Field Assistant

Derren Fox is the Zoological Field Assistant at Signy Research Station. We asked him what it’s like working there.

A smiling man sat on the ground, with penguins behind him

What is your job at Signy? 

I’m a Zoological Field Assistant for BAS, working on our long-term research, monitoring the wildlife here at Signy. 

How did you end up doing this job? 

I spent a number of years working in conservation and research for the RSPB back in the UK, studying birds, before applying for a role with BAS at Bird Island to monitor albatrosses. This will be my seventh season at Signy! 

What does a typical day look like for you? 

Luckily, I don’t really have a typical day. For me, every day is different. I could be out early with the Field Guide to head over the ice cap that covers the centre of the island to go and count the Adélie and chinstrap penguin colonies over the west coast of the island.  This could involve us being away from the base for a night or two, staying in one of the field huts around the island. 

A man in hiking clothes with a large rucksack walking across rocky ground
Derren heads off to work

What’s the best thing about your job? 

I get to work outdoors with some amazing creatures and some very nice people too, surrounded by some spectacular views. 

What are the biggest challenges? 

There are many! The weather is a regular challenge, but being away from family and loved ones for long periods is always hard work. 

What’s the best thing about Signy?

We can watch penguins on the beach and elephant seals playing in the water right in front of the station whilst doing the washing up!

What does it feel like living on a tiny, remote island with only a few other people?

It’s a very strong sense of community, living and working with such a small group of dedicated people. Surrounded by spectacular scenery and wildlife, it makes me feel very privileged to be here.

A group of birds with white chests, black heads and backs and a yellow splodge on their beak. There is water and snowy mountains in the background
Derren Fox

Antarctic shags – just one of the many wonderful birds you can spot at Signy

Island science 

Another remote island in the Southern Ocean is Zavodovski Island. This volcanic island is uninhabited – by humans at least… 

Not a pairing you were expecting, right?

It’s home to around one million breeding chinstrap penguins, making it the largest population of breeding penguins on Earth! It’s also home to some unique land-based (or terrestrial) biodiversity: mosses, lichens and invertebrates that survive the cold by living around volcanic vents. 

A group of penguins on rocky ground, with a plane flying by in the distance John Dickens
Testing new ways of counting penguins
A cliff with penguins on John Dickens
How many penguins can you count?

Because it’s an active volcano with a sheer coastline that’s battered by rough seas, it’s a tricky place for researchers to get to. But, in December last year a team of intrepid researchers made the 1,300-mile journey from the Falkland Islands, sailing for seven days over one of the world’s roughest oceans.  

They spent three weeks camping on the island, counting penguins on the ground and using drones. These more detailed counts were compared to photos taken at a higher altitude, by a plane. If these aerial photos prove to be an accurate way of counting penguins, they can be used to monitor the colonies in the future.  

A penguin on a rocky coast with a sailing boat and icebergs in the distance
John Dickens

The team’s sailing boat

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Seymour Island

Seymour Island is another remote island where exciting science discoveries are being made. Listen to this podcast about hunting for fossils, battling with mud and ammonites shaped like giant paperclips.