Evidence of emperor penguins' sensitivity to sea ice fluctuations
收藏DataCite Commons2026-03-23 更新2026-04-25 收录
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https://datadryad.org/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.cnp5hqcjv
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Using satellite-derived abundance indices over 20 years, we investigated
population change among the seven Ross Sea emperor penguin (Aptenodytes
forsteri) colonies. We found a 90% probability that the Ross Sea
metapopulation had lower springtime attendance between 2005 and 2024 (mean
change = -23%; 95% CI: -46 to +20%). We identified two distinct phases of
change: slightly increasing 2005 to 2019/2020, followed by a steep decline
2020-2024, resulting in a decrease of ~23,000 birds in five years, or
approximately 32% of the regional population. Over the 20 years, the two
southernmost colonies, Cape Crozier and Cape Colbeck, increased in size,
yet Beaufort, Coulman, Roget, and Washington declined, resulting in a
negative population trend, especially evident from 2021. Asynchronous
population change suggests metapopulation dynamics, with immigration from
western colonies possibly driving increases at Colbeck and Crozier. Winter
and spring sea ice concentration anomalies (5-y lag) and El Niño phases
(1-y lag) statistically explained the most variance in our time series. We
suggest emperor penguins may be sensitive to sea ice fluctuations,
offering insight into how this species may have adapted throughout their
history, and emphasising the need for timely re-evaluation of targeted
conservation strategies in an era of sea ice change.
提供机构:
Dryad
创建时间:
2026-01-23



