Scientists Use Penguins to Study Antarctic Climate Change
2022-02-05
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1Scientists researching climate change in Antarctica are studying penguins in an effort to better understand the area's environmental health.
2The scientists are measuring the growth and development of the penguin population on the eastern side of the Antarctic Peninsula.
3Reuters news agency recently reported on studies in the area carried out by two American researchers.
4"We are counting penguin nests to understand how many penguins are in a colony, producing (young) every year, and whether that number is going up or down with the environmental conditions," said Alex Borowicz.
5He is an ecology researcher at New York's Stony Brook University.
6The work is not easy for climate researchers in the icy, faraway reaches of Antarctica.
7But penguins are easier to follow than some other kinds of animals because they nest on land.
8Their black bodies and waste droppings can also be identified against the area's white background.
9Michael Wethington, another researcher from Stony Brook, told Reuters the penguin population can represent overall climate conditions and the health of the area's whole ecosystem.
10The researchers say counts of individual penguins can be combined with data from satellite images to get a more complete picture of how the animals are progressing.
11Gentoo penguins - with bright orange beaks and white markings on their heads - prefer open water without broken pieces of ice floating around.
12So when temperatures on the Antarctic Peninsula began rising during the latter half of the 20th century, gentoo populations moved south.
13Some scientists called the movement the "gentoofication" of Antarctica.
14David Ainley is a biologist with the ecological advisory company H.T. Harvey & Associates.
15He has been studying penguins for more than 50 years.
16"Gentoo penguins don't like sea ice," Ainley told Reuters.
17"They mostly forage over the continental shelf and don't go far out to sea."
18As sea ice has decreased along the western side of the peninsula, gentoos seem to have gotten used to the changed conditions.
19But those same conditions have been worse for the Adelies penguin species.
20This is because the Adelies depend on sea ice for feeding and reproduction.
21"When we find Adelie penguins, we typically know that sea ice is nearby," Stony Brook's Wethington said.
22He added that whenever researchers see sea ice decreasing or disappearing, they also see Adelie penguin populations drop sharply.
23Even though Adelie penguins are increasing in number overall, some populations have fallen by more than 65 percent, researchers say.
24On their January trip to the area, the Stony Brook scientists found that Adelie colonies around the still-icy Weddell Sea had remained solid during the past ten years.
25"This peninsula is maybe a safe space as we see climate change progressing and overall warming throughout the globe," Wethington said.
26I'm Bryan Lynn.