China Daily

Antarctic calamity

Mass starvation hits penguin chicks in ‘catastroph­ic breeding failure’

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SYDNEY — Mass starvation has wiped out thousands of penguin chicks in Antarctica, with unusually thick sea ice forcing their parents to forage further for food in what conservati­onists on Friday called a “catastroph­ic breeding failure”.

French scientists, supported by the World Wildlife Fund, have been studying a colony of 18,000 pairs of Adelie penguins in East Antarctica since 2010 and discovered only two chicks survived the breeding season in early 2017.

They attributed the disaster to extensive sea ice late in the summer, meaning the adult penguins had to travel further to find food, with the chicks dying as they waited.

Yan Ropert-Coudert, a penguin scientist at Dumont D’Urville research station, adjacent to the colony, said the region was impacted by environmen­tal changes linked to the breakup of the Mertz glacier.

“The conditions are set for this to happen more frequently due to the breaking of the Mertz glacier in 2010 that changed the configurat­ion of the stretch of sea in front of the colony,” he said.

“But there are other factors needed to have a zero year: A mix of temperatur­e, wind direction and strength, no opening of polynya in front of the colony.”

A polynya is an area of unfrozen sea within an ice pack.

He added that the coming season seemed to be better for the birds in terms of sea ice “but we never know how it will turn unfortunat­ely”.

Surviving mostly on a diet of krill — a small shrimp-like crustacean — Adelie penguins, slick and efficient swimmers, have been generally faring well in East Antarctica.

But they have been declining in the Antarctic region more generally where climate change has taken its toll, with shifting ice reducing habitat while warming seas affect their prey.

Four years ago, the same colony, which numbered 20,196 pairs at the time, failed to produce a single chick.

Heavy sea ice, combined with unusually warm weather and rain followed by a rapid drop in temperatur­e, resulted in them becoming saturated and freezing to death.

News of the penguin’s problems came ahead of an annual meeting next week in Hobart of the 25-member Convention on the Conservati­on of Antarctic Marine Living Resources.

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 ?? PAULINE ASKIN / REUTERS ?? Two Adelie penguins stand atop a block of melting ice on a rocky shoreline in East Antarctica.
PAULINE ASKIN / REUTERS Two Adelie penguins stand atop a block of melting ice on a rocky shoreline in East Antarctica.

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