A robotic underwater survey has revealed an immense and highly organized fish colony hidden beneath the Filchner Ice Shelf in Antarctica. In just 48 hours of observation, Lassie captured a rare look at about 60 million active nests belonging to living fish.
The finding builds on earlier mapping by the Alfred Wegener Institute, which identified the colony in 2022 across an area of 240 square kilometers. Lassie was then deployed to observe the site up close with a high-resolution camera system.
A robot designed for life under ice
Lassie is short for Low-Altitude Survey System for Icefish. The robot can record 20 images per second, allowing researchers to study nest structure and colony density in far greater detail.
The data show that the nest density remained stable at around one nest per four square meters. That figure highlights how densely packed the fish activity is beneath the Antarctic ice.
| Key Finding | Detail |
|---|---|
| Active nests | 60 million |
| Colony area | 240 square kilometers |
| Nest density | 1 nest per 4 square meters |
| Individual nest size | 75 cm |
| Average eggs per nest | 1,700 eggs |
| Colony biomass | about 60,000 tons |
Nests built for survival
Lassie’s imagery shows that each nest measures about 75 cm and contains an average of 1,700 eggs. According to Daily Galaxy, cited by CNBC Indonesia on Wednesday (15/7/2026), male fish guard nearly 85% of the nests found at the site.
The colony’s total biomass is estimated at around 60,000 tons. The fish live in water that is 2 degrees Celsius warmer than the surrounding seafloor water.
Why the site stands out
The robot also revealed that the nests are not perfectly uniform, although most follow the same basic pattern. At the bottom of each nest is a circular depression filled with gravel and small stones that help keep the eggs from being shifted by ocean currents.
Sensors recorded that mud deposits inside the nests were about 40% lower than in nearby areas. That difference suggests the fish are actively maintaining the nests rather than simply digging them and leaving them behind.
The discovery shows how life can persist in one of the planet’s harshest environments, under a thick Antarctic ice shelf. Beneath the cold surface, the colony has formed a large, orderly nesting system that continues to be actively guarded.
Source: www.cnbcindonesia.com





