A few months ago, researchers reported the surprising discovery that
marine1 creatures living in one Arctic fjord keep busy through the
permanently2 dark and
frigid3 winter months. Now, a report in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on Jan. 7, 2016, extends this activity to the whole of the Arctic. They also find that, in the absence of any sunlight, it's the moon that drives the
vertical4 migrations5 of tiny marine animals. The behavior is most likely an attempt by zooplankton to avoid
predators6 hunting by moonlight, the researchers say.
"During the permanently dark and extremely cold Artic winter, [these] tiny marine creatures, like
mythical7 werewolves, respond to moonlight by undergoing mass migrations," says Kim Last of the Scottish Association for Marine Science in Scotland.
No matter where the researchers looked during the Arctic winter -- in fjord, shelf, slope, or open sea -- they observed the same behavior. Further
investigation8 showed that the marine creatures had shifted their activities from following the 24-hour solar day to following the 24.8-hour lunar day.
In winter, zooplankton's vertical migrations take place when the moon rises above the horizon, the researchers report. In addition to this daily cycle, they also discovered a mass sinking of zooplankton from the surface waters to a depth of about 50 meters every 29.5 days in the winter, coinciding with the full moon.
"The most surprising finding is that these migrations are not rare or
isolated9 to just a few places," Last says. "The
acoustic10 database used for our analysis
cumulatively11 spans 50 years of data from moorings that cover much of the Arctic Ocean. The occurrences of lunar migrations happen every winter at all sites, even under sea ice with snow cover on top."