The Tara Polaris scientific vision: Advancing our understanding of the central Arctic Ocean to better address life in the Earth System
Marcel Babin, Lee Karp-Boss, Chris Bowler, Mathieu Ardyna, J. Michel Flores, Maxime Geoffroy, Jean-Francois Ghiglione, Kathy S. Law, Marcel Nicolaus, Benjamin Rabe, Julia Schmale, Silvia G. Acinas, Jody W. Deming, Pierre E. Galand, Thomas Linkowski, Clementine Moulin

TL;DR
This paper outlines the Tara Polaris scientific program aimed at understanding the central Arctic Ocean's ecosystem, climate interactions, and long-term changes through a series of expeditions and observatory initiatives over 20 years.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive, multi-year scientific vision and program for Arctic research using the Tara Polar Station, focusing on ecosystem dynamics and climate change impacts.
Findings
Establishment of the Tara Polar Station as a permanent Arctic observatory
First transpolar drift expedition focusing on key Arctic environmental themes
Development of a long-term monitoring framework for Arctic ecosystem changes
Abstract
The Arctic Ocean is currently experiencing, at the forefront of global concerns, the pressures of climate change and global pollution. To boost our ability to understand the state of this ecosystem, its evolution in this context and its resilience, the Tara Ocean Foundation has built the Tara Polar Station (TPS), intended to become a permanent observatory of the central Arctic Ocean. The objective of this initiative is threefold: to deepen our knowledge of the foundations of life in an ice-covered polar ocean, to better understand the dynamics of the coupled ocean-ice-atmosphere system and the role of living organisms, and to identify long-term trends in the main characteristics of the Central Arctic Ocean ecosystem resulting from global change. In this article, we describe the vision that guided the development of the Tara Polaris scientific programme, and more specifically the first…
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Taxonomy
TopicsArctic and Antarctic ice dynamics · Climate change and permafrost · Indigenous Studies and Ecology
