Giant Arctic Viruses Key to Slowing Ice Melt, Impact Climate Models
September 13, 2025
Recent research reveals that viruses interacting with Arctic microalgae play a crucial role in slowing ice melting by regulating algal growth, which helps maintain the ice's reflectivity and could buffer against climate change.
This discovery prompts new questions about how microbial life influences climate systems, particularly regarding their impact on carbon cycles and greenhouse gas emissions from melting ice.
Understanding the specificity and widespread effects of these viruses could enhance climate models by emphasizing the importance of microbial ecosystems in Earth's climate regulation.
Scientists in Greenland have identified giant microorganisms, including viruses up to 2.5 micrometers in size, thriving beneath the ice in environments once considered uninhabitable.
These viruses have genomes comparable to bacteria and are metabolically active, indicating complex microbial ecosystems exist even in extreme glacial conditions.
This natural viral regulation may influence seasonal melt cycles and reduce heat absorption, forming a feedback mechanism that helps stabilize Arctic temperatures.
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Futura-Sciences • Sep 13, 2025
Greenland’s unexpected discovery could change everything, scientists say