Fish ear bones hold clues to Antarctic Ocean health
Assistant professor Cassandra Brooks has received an NSF CAREER award, the organization recently announced
Cassandra Brooks, assistant professor of environmental studies at the ČÊĂń±Š”ä, was in the negotiating room when the Ross Sea in Antarctica became the worldâs largest marine protected area (MPA) in 2016.
The deliberations had been tense, Brooks says, involving more than 24 countries, each with its own aims for the waters surrounding the icy southern continentâcommercial, environmental or otherwise.
âWeâd be close to reaching an agreement,â Brooks remembers, âand then one country would raise their flag and say, âNo, I donât agree.ââ
The geopolitical gymnastics carried on for two weeks before the chair of the committee brokering the discussions finally said, âWe have it. We have consensus.â
âThe room exploded in applause,â Brooks recalls. âPeople from different countries were hugging each other. Some people were crying. It was one of the most amazing moments of my life.â
Now Brooks has received a Faculty Early Career Development Program (CAREER) award from the National Science Foundation to examine whether the Ross Sea MPA is doing its job.
Brooks calls the Ross Sea a âglobal treasure.â
âIt is the most productive stretch of the Southern Ocean,â she explains. âKatabatic windsâwhich are kind of like Boulderâs chinook winds but coldâblow the seasonal sea ice away from the Ross Ice Shelf, creating large pools of open water.â
Then, when the sun finally rises after the long Antarctic winter, Brooks says, it gives rise to a phytoplankton bloom so massive, it can be seen from space.
Hence the Ross Seaâs outsized presence of marine life. âYou collectively have more penguins in the Ross Sea than anywhere else,â Brooks says. âYou have disproportionate amounts of seals and whales.â
The Ross Sea remains âthe most intact large marine ecosystem left in the world,â says Brooks. This is what makes it so valuable to researchers.
âIf you donât know how a healthy system functions,â she says, âhow do you know how to effectively conserve it and protect it?â
Yet in the late â90s, commercial fishing began to encroach upon the Ross Sea. And one of the most sought-after catches just so happens to be the key to Brooksâ research: the Antarctic toothfish, the Southern Oceanâs top fish predator.
Thereâs a chance youâve heard of this fish, Brooks says, albeit by a different name. On restaurant menus itâs called Chilean sea bass. âIt was a fishmonger who changed the name and then targeted it at high-level, expensive restaurants,â Brooks says. âItâs definitely not a bass!â
According to Brooks, the Antarctic toothfish holds a wealth of information, particularly in its ear bones, called otoliths.
âThey are these little bony structures in the fishâs ear, and like any bony structure, they accumulate bone over the course of the fishâs lifetime,â Brooks says. These bones can reveal a fishâs age, where it was born and where it has moved over the course of its life.
And when looked at in the context of a time series, Brooks says, these ear bones can reveal whether a fishâs life history and migration patterns have changed, among other things.
Brooks has more than 40 years of otoliths to study, which have been shared with her by other leading toothfish experts and Antarctic scientists.
âThis will be the longest time series that anyoneâs ever looked at for the species,â Brooks says. The time series is so long, in fact, that Brooks will be able to analyze otoliths from before the arrival of the Ross Sea fisheries.
Fisheries, Brooks says, can significantly alter a species and the ecosystem. âLongline fisheries tend to target the largest (and oldest) fish and can thus lead to longevity overfishing where the fish tend to be younger and smaller over time.â
This can hinder their reproductive success and have knock-on effects in the wider ecosystem.
âWhile toothfish are a top fish predator, they are also a key prey species,â Brooks says. âSeal and whale populations depend on these larger fish.â
In other words, Brooks says, otoliths are not just snapshots of the Antarctic toothfish itself. They can serve as health records for the Ross Sea system, which along with the rest of the Antarctic is undergoing impacts from climate change.
âWe know the Antarctic marine systems are changing,â Brooks says. âBut it is difficult to tease apart the impacts of fishing from climate change. I hope to use the insight provided through examining otoliths over a long time series to better understand these changes and to better evaluate if the boundaries of the Ross Sea MPA are sufficient or need to be changed.â
For Brooks, the most exciting part of the CAREER award is that it funds âthe bigger picture about who you are and the work you do.â
Brooks intends to use the award to inform those who make environmental policy, which she admits is easier said than done.
Itâs not as simple as doing the science, she says. âBeing trained as a scientist, I always thought, if you have sufficient science, policymakers will make decisions based on the science.â She soon discovered that this viewpoint was, in her words, âsuper naĂŻveâ and so decided to become more engaged in the policy process and better navigate the science-policy interface. Currently, for example, she participates in Southern Ocean policy meetings, serving on the delegation of the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research.
I hope to use the insight provided through examining otoliths over a long time series to better understand these changes and to better evaluate if the boundaries of the Ross Sea MPA are sufficient or need to be changed.â
Nor is informing environmental policy as simple as educating the public, Brooks claims. And she would know, having earned a graduate certificate in scientific communication and written multiple articles for popular audiences. (She and her husband, nature photographer John Weller, were core members of the , a grand-scale media effort that focused on securing protection for the Ross Sea.)
Effecting real change at the policy level, Brooks believes, requires a combination of things: âreally cool science,â outreach, public engagement, communication with policymakers, and the training of students. Put these things together, Brooks says, and you have âengaged scholarshipââprecisely the kind of scholarship Brooks plans to pursue throughout her career.
âAs a person whoâs interdisciplinary,â she says, âIâm just so incredibly excited.â
Brooks began her CAREER research on May 1 and will continue it until April 30, 2027.
In the meantime, she says, think twice before ordering the Chilean sea bass.