New Straits Times

AQUATIC BIRDS MIGHT BE ENDANGERED

Its population at Pig Island has dropped and a research team suspects that climate change could be playing a role, as it has with other colonies of penguins in parts of Antarctica, writes

- KAREN WEINTRAUB

AFTER three decades out of the public eye, a giant colony of king penguins has lost 90 per cent of its population, according to a new study.

The colony of 500,000 breeding pairs, long considered the largest of king penguins in the world, lived on the Île aux Cochons (or, less elegantly, Pig Island), a French territory in the Crozet archipelag­o in the southern Indian Ocean between South Africa and Antarctica.

But, the penguins haven’t been counted in person since 1982 when researcher­s last visited. In late 2016, researcher­s flew over it by helicopter and saw noticeably fewer penguins than expected.

Since then, by examining three decades of satellite images, researcher­s have concluded that there are just 60,000 breeding pairs left on the island.

“It was really a surprise for us,” said Henri Weimerskir­ch, a coauthor on the new paper, published in Antarctic Science, and a member of the research teams in 1982 and 2016. “It’s really very depressing.”

The research team suspects that climate change could be playing a role, as it has with other colonies of penguins in parts of Antarctica. But competitio­n for resources, diseases and relocation may possibly have contribute­d to population losses.

Researcher­s plan to do a head count on the island but they can’t get there until late fall 2019 at the earliest, because of the cost and timing issues, said Weimerskir­ch, research director of the Chizé Centre for Biological Studies at the French National Centre for Scientific Research.

A protected nature preserve, Pig Island isn’t easy to reach, and the animals can’t be seen from the water, because the colony is situated inland, he said.

If the count from the satellite images proves accurate, it would significan­tly reduce the global population of king penguins, estimated at 1.5 million to 1.7 million breeding pairs worldwide with this loss. They had not been considered endangered before, but might be, Weimerskir­ch said.

King penguins are the second largest in population after emperor penguins. They don’t nest, but lay one egg and parents take turns incubating the egg with an abdominal layer called a brood patch for two months. King penguins leave their young and swim south to forage for fish and squid in the waters of the Antarctic polar front, where cold, deep water mixes with more temperate seas. If they can’t reach this polar front and can’t swim back within about a week, their chicks will starve to death.

The trouble seems to have started in 1997 when an El Niño weather event drove up temperatur­es considerab­ly for a year, pushing their food sources so far south that the chicks died before their parents could return to feed them.

Emiliano Trucchi, an evolutiona­ry biologist at the University of

Researcher­s plan to do a head count on the island but they can’t get there until late fall 2019 at the earliest, because of the cost and timing issues ...

Ferrara in Italy, who also studies king penguins in the Crozet archipelag­o, said he was disturbed by the report.

Work that Trucchi and his colleagues published earlier this year raised questions about how king penguins would cope with warming seas from climate change. His model predicted the Crozet penguins would lose their habitat by 2100 and be forced to relocate or die.

A local problem like what is happening on Pig Island could hasten their decline, Trucchi said.

“It deserves further investigat­ions,” he said. “It’s a very peculiar process and we need to understand how to fit this into the big picture.”

 ?? NYT PIX ?? In a photo provided by Henri Weimerskir­ch, a colony of king penguins on the Île aux Cochons, or Pig Island, in 1982, when researcher­s last counted its population. The colony in the remote Crozet archipelag­o was once thought to number 500,000 breeding...
NYT PIX In a photo provided by Henri Weimerskir­ch, a colony of king penguins on the Île aux Cochons, or Pig Island, in 1982, when researcher­s last counted its population. The colony in the remote Crozet archipelag­o was once thought to number 500,000 breeding...
 ??  ?? The colony viewed from a helicopter in December 2016, when researcher­s noticed far fewer penguins than expected.
The colony viewed from a helicopter in December 2016, when researcher­s noticed far fewer penguins than expected.
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