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If Ad茅lie Penguins would just sit still, they鈥檇 be easier to count. Scientists had only a rough idea of their overall numbers until last month, when results of the first Antarctica-wide Ad茅lie census were , the journal of the American Ornithologists鈥 Union. Apparently, Antarctica has more penguins than we thought: The researchers found 53 percent more Ad茅lies than previously estimated, with the help of satellite imagery able to spy on remote colonies. The finding, which totals Ad茅lies at 3.79 million breeding pairs, is welcome news, though .
Hello, Ad茅lie
Of Earth鈥檚 17 (or so) penguin species, only two are restricted to Antarctica. The Emperor Penguin (star of Happy Feet and March of the Penguins) is the world鈥檚 largest, about four feet tall with a gorgeous swoosh of yellow behind each cheek. Emperors nest on ice, lay one egg in winter, and live up to 50 years. Ad茅lie Penguins overlap with Emperors for much of their range but have very different features and habits: They are half as tall, , nest on land, lay two eggs in summer, and live up to 20 years.
Emperors are regal and deliberate in manner. Ad茅lies are mischievous, energetic, competent, and curious, and they have little fear of humans. I know first-hand, because I spent three months studying a colony of a quarter-million Ad茅lies at Antarctica鈥檚 Cape Crozier a few years ago, and each year I visit lots of Ad茅lies during expedition cruises. I find the Ad茅lies utterly captivating, especially when they waddle up to me, wide-eyed, to inspect my shoelaces.
A New Kind of Census
Researchers Heather Lynch and Michelle LaRue, working from Stony Brook University and the University of Minnesota, used Google Earth-type satellite photographs to zoom in on penguin colonies around Antarctica鈥檚 coastlines. From space, the colonies show up in poop: Blotchy brown stains of guano stand out against rock and ice. By calculating the density of nesting penguins through on-the-ground counts, Lynch and LaRue were able to infer, with fine accuracy, the number of Ad茅lies each satellite image represented.
This marks the first time anyone has counted the world鈥檚 Ad茅lies by satellite, though LaRue worked on a similar 2012 study with Emperor Penguins (which nearly doubled the known Emperor population). The authors found several new Ad茅lie breeding sites and conducted careful censuses of established colonies. The resulting figure of 3.79 million pairs is half again higher than the last worldwide estimate, published in 1993.
What鈥檚 in a Number?
Although much of the 53 percent difference reflects improved counting techniques, Lynch and LaRue report that Ad茅lie Penguin populations are generally going up. Nearly a third of the difference, they say, can be attributed to real increases at known colonies.
Population trends are more pronounced on a regional scale. The biggest Ad茅lie Penguin colonies, in the Ross Sea area of Antarctica (where significant sea ice remains), have been growing steadily for several decades, while those on the western Antarctic Peninsula (where sea ice has declined in recent years) are now crashing. So far, the Ross Sea increases have been enough to offset declines elsewhere. But while this is good news, it doesn鈥檛 mean that climate change isn鈥檛 a problem for the birds.
Peering Into the Future
Ad茅lies spend most of their lives at sea and rely on sea ice as a platform for hunting krill, a small, shrimp-like crustacean (krill also rely on sea ice to feed, as they consume algae that clings to floating ice). Because of this double-pronged dependence on sea ice, 鈥攁 鈥渃anary in the coal mine鈥 for climate change. As far as scientists can tell, krill and sea ice are the two most important factors affecting Ad茅lie Penguin populations鈥攁nd they鈥檙e each seriously affected by climate change as the earth warms and sea ice melts.
Some scientists worry that climate change may shift the balance for penguins in coming decades. In 2012, the IUCN Red List uplisted both Ad茅lie and Emperor penguins from 鈥淟east Concern鈥 to 鈥淣ear Threatened,鈥 citing an expected 鈥渕oderately rapid population decline over the next three generations owing to the effects of projected climate change.鈥 A 2010 paper by Ad茅lie expert David Ainley and colleagues warned that, if Earth鈥檚 temperature reaches two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels (projected, in the same paper, to occur between 2025 and 2052), Emperor and Ad茅lie colonies north of 70 degrees south would decline or disappear, affecting 40 percent and 70 percent of their respective breeding populations.
We don鈥檛 know exactly how Antarctica鈥檚 penguins will react to a shifting climate. At least, with this latest satellite census of Ad茅lie Penguins, we now have a yardstick against which the future can be measured.