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Researchers improve satellite surveillance of emperor penguins

Date:
May 29, 2024
Source:
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Summary:
New phenological and behavioral models will help scientists collect more accurate counts of emperor penguins. Emperor penguins are at the top of the food web. They are a reflection of how lower levels of the marine food web are being impacted by climate change. Systematic data collection on the biological component of ecosystems is still in its infancy, especially in harsh environments, in which consistent and repeatable research is particularly hard to achieve.
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Monitoring the global population of emperor penguins is a major challenge. Not only do they inhabit Antarctica's harsh, remote environment, their colony occupancy also fluctuates based on a series of factors. A new study published in Nature Communications, "Remote sensing of emperor penguin abundance and breeding success," draws attention to these challenges and presents a method that can accurately predict the number of breeding pairs as well as fledging chicks.

Over the last two decades, researchers have been using satellite imagery, among other technologies, as means for keeping track of this threatened species. While it has provided valuable population data, the counts to date are still inconsistent and unreliable for a variety of reasons. The first is that satellite images can only be taken between October and April, otherwise there isn't enough light to capture the species at their breeding sites, mostly on sea ice. Another challenge of satellite imagery is that the number of penguins present at a colony can highly vary, as adults may come and go. It also cannot capture chicks.

What this new method accomplishes is to use satellite imagery in conjunction with a phenological and a behavioral model.

"This means taking into consideration seasonal and conditional occurrences that may be taking place at the time a satellite image is captured. When it comes to emperor penguins, those include events such as the currently perceived penguin temperature, comparable to the windchill temperature for humans, and foraging efforts," said Daniel Zitterbart, one of the study's senior authors and an associate scientist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI). "We tested these phenological and behavioral models for periods of three and four years in two different colonies."

The estimated counts from the satellite imagery were compared to a dataset collected over a 10 year period at the Pointe Géologie colony. Céline Le Bohec, a senior author of the study from CNRS-France and Scientific Centre of Monaco, whose team collected this dataset, emphasizes the importance of long-term, systematic time series for understanding and predicting the impacts of global changes.

"Systematic data collection on the biological component of ecosystems is still in its infancy, especially in harsh environments, in which consistent and repeatable research is particularly hard to achieve," Le Bohec said. "In the coming years, climate change, fishing and other human interference in emperor penguin's habitat will put the species ability to adapt under harsh pressure. This scarcity still constitutes a critical knowledge gap, and getting this methodology correct in a timely manner for emperor penguins will help to protect them."

The study's lead author, Alexander Winterl, a PhD candidate at Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, says he hopes these new population counts will contribute to more accurate predictions and inform policy.

"The rapid decline of ice on and around Antarctica threatens their livelihood." Winterl said. "Previous studies suggest that over 90% of the emperor penguin colonies will disappear by 2100 without major cuts in greenhouse gas emissions. We need to have accurate population data to make people aware of these extreme changes in the Southern Ocean, not only to protect these seabirds, but to draw awareness to the overarching impacts of climate change."

"Emperor penguins are at the top of the food web.They are a reflection of how lower levels of the marine food web are being impacted," Zitterbart said. "This research has the potential to transform the emperor penguin from a hard-to-study species to the canary in a coal mine of the Southern Ocean and act as an early warning system for ecosystem health. Using this new method, our next goal is to use annual satellite imagery to get accurate population counts and breeding success in all 66 emperor penguin colonies known to date."


Story Source:

Materials provided by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Alexander Winterl, Sebastian Richter, Aymeric Houstin, Téo Barracho, Matthieu Boureau, Clément Cornec, Douglas Couet, Robin Cristofari, Claire Eiselt, Ben Fabry, Adélie Krellenstein, Christoph Mark, Astrid Mainka, Delphine Ménard, Jennifer Morinay, Susie Pottier, Elodie Schloesing, Céline Le Bohec, Daniel P. Zitterbart. Remote sensing of emperor penguin abundance and breeding success. Nature Communications, 2024; 15 (1) DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48239-8

Cite This Page:

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. "Researchers improve satellite surveillance of emperor penguins." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 29 May 2024. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/05/240529144139.htm>.
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. (2024, May 29). Researchers improve satellite surveillance of emperor penguins. ScienceDaily. Retrieved July 15, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/05/240529144139.htm
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. "Researchers improve satellite surveillance of emperor penguins." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/05/240529144139.htm (accessed July 15, 2024).

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