Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Dire future for king penguin population

Climate change could see more than 70% gone by 2100, writes NICKY WILLEMSE

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AN internatio­nal team of researcher­s – including South Africa – have completed a study which predicts that more than 70% of the global king penguin population could disappear by 2100.

The results of the study – published in the latest edition of Nature Climate Change – show that warmer sea temperatur­es are shifting the sub-Antarctic birds’ main food sources further south and, unless the penguins relocate too, they are likely to starve.

More than 70% of the world’s king penguin population form breeding colonies on Crozet, Kerguelen and Marion Island.

These birds rely on the Antarctic Polar Front – an upwelling front in the

Southern Ocean, where cold Antarctic and warmer sub-Antarctic water meet, churning up nutrients and attracting enormous amounts of fish – as their main food source.

In the breeding season, parents leave their chicks to swim 350km to 500km to the front, returning days later with food for their young.

But warmer seas are shifting the front further south – and the study predicts that the penguins will have to swim more than 700km, the maximum distance they can travel to find food without compromisi­ng the survival of their chicks, due to their own increased energy expenditur­e. The possible starvation of their chicks could lead to huge population crashes.

“The front moves from year to year depending on the temperatur­e of the ocean – and we have already seen impacts in king penguin numbers in the years it has shifted further away from the breeding sites,” said Nelson Mandela University senior zoology lecturer Dr Pierre Pistorius who formed part of the French-led research team and was one of the co-authors of the paper.

Other researcher­s in the study were from Monaco, Italy, Norway, Austria and the United States.

Pistorius, who has been conducting research at Marion Island for the past two decades, said the study had been important in shaping a new three-year collaborat­ive study between South

African and France, funded by the South African National Antarctic Programme, to further investigat­e the impact

‘It’s hard to imagine Marion Island

of the shifting front on Marion Island’s population.

“What we have found at Marion Island is that king penguin numbers have actually been stable over the past years, but this study provides strong prediction­s about how it could all change in the future, if we don’t do something about global warming...

“It’s hard to imagine

Marion Island without king penguins, but there is no

doubt the effect of climate change’

doubt that climate change is causing major changes in the Southern Ocean.”

The study says king penguins could save themselves by moving to other islands further south, except they have strict habitat requiremen­ts, so a new home might be difficult to find.

To form a colony where they can mate, lay eggs and rear chicks over a year, they need tolerable temperatur­es all-year round, no sea ice around the island, relatively smooth beaches – and a food source close by to feed their young.

The research team used high-tech modelling, based on genetic and demographi­c data, to reconstruc­t the changes in the worldwide penguin population throughout the last 50 000 years.

What they found was that past climatic changes, causing shifts in marine currents, seaice distributi­on and Antarctic Polar Front location, have always been linked to critical episodes for the king penguins. However, they have managed to overcome these, relocating during tough times.

However, they have never had to compete with rapid and irreversib­le changes in their environmen­t caused by human activity.

The polar regions are feeling the impact of climate change the most – and the Southern Ocean is also subject to commercial fishing.

“There are still some islands further south where king penguins may retreat,” said study co-author and co-supervisor, Dr Celine Le Bohec from the University of Strasbourg in France.

“But the competitio­n for breeding sites and for food will be harsh, especially with the other penguin species like the chinstrap, gentoo or Adelie penguins, even without the fisheries.

“It is difficult to predict the outcome, but there will surely be losses on the way.

“If we want to save anything, proactive and efficient conservati­on efforts but, above all, coordinate­d global action against global warming should start now.”

 ?? PICTURE: OTTO WHITEHEAD ?? Nelson Mandela University senior zoology lecturer Dr Pierre Pistorius conducts research on king penguins at Marion Island. In 100 years’ time, the animals may have disappeare­d from the sub-Antarctic island, says the writer.
PICTURE: OTTO WHITEHEAD Nelson Mandela University senior zoology lecturer Dr Pierre Pistorius conducts research on king penguins at Marion Island. In 100 years’ time, the animals may have disappeare­d from the sub-Antarctic island, says the writer.
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