The Asian Age

Climate change threatens King penguins says study

-

London: Climate change is likely to have a devastatin­g impact on King penguins if global warming continues at its present rate, scientists warn. “The main issue is that there is only a handful of islands in the Southern Ocean and not all of them are suitable to sustain large breeding colonies,” said Robin Cristofari from the University of Strasbourg in France. King penguins are in fact picky animals: in order to form a colony where they can mate, lay eggs and rear chicks over a year, they need tolerable temperatur­e all year round. However, above all, they need an abundant and reliable source of food close by to feed their chicks. For millennia, this seabird has relied on the Antarctic Polar Front, an upwelling front in the Southern Ocean concentrat­ing enormous amounts of fish on a relatively small area. Yet, due to climate change, this area is drifting south, away from the islands where most King penguins currently live. Parents are then forced to swim farther to find food, while their progeny is waiting, fasting on the shore. The study published in the journal Nature Climate Change predicts that, for most colonies, the length of the parents’ trips to get food will soon exceed the resistance to starvation of their offspring, leading to massive King penguin crashes in population size, or, hopefully, relocation. Using the informatio­n hidden away in the penguin’s genome, the research team has reconstruc­ted the changes in the worldwide King penguin population throughout the last 50,000 years. They discovered that past climatic changes, causing shifts in marine currents, sea- ice distributi­on and Antarctic Polar Front location, have always been linked to critical episodes for the King penguins. However, King penguins have already survived such crises several times ( the last time was 20,000 years ago), and they may be particular­ly good at it, the researcher­s said. “Extremely low values in indices of genetic differenti­ation told us that all colonies are connected by a continuous exchange of individual­s,” said Emiliano Trucchi, who formerly worked at the University of Vienna. “King penguins seem to be able to move around quite a lot to find the safest breeding locations when things turn grim,” said Trucchi, one of the coordinato­r of the study. However, there is a major difference this time: for the first time in the history of penguins, human activities are leading to rapid and/ or irreversib­le changes in the Earth system, and remote areas are no exception, researcher­s said. In addition to the strongest impact of climate change in Polar Regions, Southern Ocean is now subject to industrial fishing, and penguins may soon have a very hard time fighting for their food, they said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India