Scientists Use Penguins to Study Antarctic Climate Change

2022-02-05

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  • Scientists researching climate change in Antarctica are studying penguins in an effort to better understand the area's environmental health.
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  • The scientists are measuring the growth and development of the penguin population on the eastern side of the Antarctic Peninsula.
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  • Reuters news agency recently reported on studies in the area carried out by two American researchers.
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  • "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.
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  • He is an ecology researcher at New York's Stony Brook University.
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  • The work is not easy for climate researchers in the icy, faraway reaches of Antarctica.
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  • But penguins are easier to follow than some other kinds of animals because they nest on land.
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  • Their black bodies and waste droppings can also be identified against the area's white background.
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  • Michael 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.
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  • The 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.
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  • Gentoo penguins - with bright orange beaks and white markings on their heads - prefer open water without broken pieces of ice floating around.
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  • So when temperatures on the Antarctic Peninsula began rising during the latter half of the 20th century, gentoo populations moved south.
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  • Some scientists called the movement the "gentoofication" of Antarctica.
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  • David Ainley is a biologist with the ecological advisory company H.T. Harvey & Associates.
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  • He has been studying penguins for more than 50 years.
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  • "Gentoo penguins don't like sea ice," Ainley told Reuters.
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  • "They mostly forage over the continental shelf and don't go far out to sea."
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  • As sea ice has decreased along the western side of the peninsula, gentoos seem to have gotten used to the changed conditions.
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  • But those same conditions have been worse for the Adelies penguin species.
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  • This is because the Adelies depend on sea ice for feeding and reproduction.
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  • "When we find Adelie penguins, we typically know that sea ice is nearby," Stony Brook's Wethington said.
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  • He added that whenever researchers see sea ice decreasing or disappearing, they also see Adelie penguin populations drop sharply.
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  • Even though Adelie penguins are increasing in number overall, some populations have fallen by more than 65 percent, researchers say.
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  • On 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.
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  • "This peninsula is maybe a safe space as we see climate change progressing and overall warming throughout the globe," Wethington said.
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  • I'm Bryan Lynn.