Books
Yves Earhart

Seasonal Ice Life

Seasonal Ice Life explores how life survives—and flourishes—in ecosystems dominated by cyclical freezing, from Arctic tundras to high-altitude lakes. Centered on biological resilience, the book reveals how organisms like wood frogs (which freeze 65% of their body water) and permafrost microbes defy extreme conditions using cryoprotectants, antifreeze proteins, and metabolic dormancy. These adaptations, honed over millennia, offer urgent lessons for biodiversity conservation as climate change disrupts freeze-thaw patterns. By linking physiological marvels to ecological stability, the book positions seasonal ice zones as critical models for understanding survival in a warming world.

Structured into three sections, the text first unpacks physical adaptations, then traces their genetic origins, and finally examines climate impacts on ice-dependent ecosystems. Case studies, like symbiotic ice algae sustaining Arctic food webs, highlight communal survival strategies often overlooked in extremophile research. The narrative weaves field studies, genomic analyses, and historical expeditions, avoiding jargon while explaining complex concepts—such as ice-albedo feedback loops—through relatable analogies.

Unique in focusing on dynamic freeze-thaw cycles rather than permanent cold, the book bridges climate science, biotechnology, and conservation, revealing how freeze-tolerant bacteria inspire medical cryopreservation or how thawing permafrost threatens carbon stores. Written for both scientists and curious readers, it balances crisp scientific detail with human stories, urging pragmatic action through its exploration of ethical dilemmas like assisted migration. Seasonal Ice Life reframes ice not as a barrier but as a catalyst for evolutionary ingenuity—and a beacon for navigating ecological uncertainty.
75 printed pages
Original publication
2025
Publication year
2025
Publisher
Publifye
Translator
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Artist
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