Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Endangered Species Act Protection Sought for Emperor Penguins




For Immediate Release, November 28, 2011
Contact: Miyoko Sakashita, (415) 632-5308

Endangered Species Act Protection Sought for Emperor Penguins
Melting Sea Ice Threatens Penguins; Reality Echoes Happy Feet Two Plot

SAN FRANCISCO— The Center for Biological Diversity filed a legal petition today seeking
Endangered Species Act protection for emperor penguins threatened by global warming.
Emperors are the most ice-dependent of all penguin species, threatened by the loss of their
sea-ice habitat as well as declining food availability wrought by the warming ocean off Antarctica.
Their populations are declining because of global warming; some colonies have entirely disappeared.
“The sea-ice habitat that emperor penguins need to survive is melting beneath their feet,” said Miyoko
Sakashita, oceans director at the Center. “It’s great to see movies like Happy Feet Two bringing the
plight of emperor penguins to people around the world. But in reality, there’s no happy Hollywood
ending for these penguins unless we take real action to address the global climate crisis.” 

Emperor penguins need sea ice for breeding and foraging. Today’s petition highlights the serious problems
of melting sea ice and other warming-driven changes in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean. Areas of
Antarctica are experiencing dramatic warming, leading to loss of sea ice as well as the collapse of ice sheets.
In 2006, the Center filed a petition to list 12 penguin species as threatened or endangered. The Interior
Department conducted status reviews for 10 of those species. After delays and ultimately a court order,
the agency protected seven species but denied protection for the remaining ones, including the emperor.
Today’s petition presents new scientific information demonstrating that emperor penguins are imperiled.
“Emperor penguins are icons of wild Antarctica,” said Sakashita. “And protecting them under the
Endangered Species Act is essential to their survival.”

Listing under the Endangered Species Act would provide broad protection to these penguins, including
a requirement that federal agencies ensure that any action carried out, authorized or funded by the U.S.
government will not “jeopardize the continued existence” of the penguin species. For example, if penguins
are listed, future approval of fishing permits for U.S.-flagged vessels operating on the high seas would
require analysis and minimization of impacts on the listed penguins. The Act also has an important role
to play in reducing greenhouse gas pollution by compelling federal agencies to look at the impact of the
emissions generated by their activities on listed species.

Emperor penguins are the world’s largest penguin species, capable of growing nearly four feet tall.
They range throughout coastal Antarctica and travel each spring to inland breeding sites. Near the
beginning of summer, adult penguins and their chicks return to the sea and spend the rest of the summer
feeding there.

For more information on penguins and a link to the federal petition,
please see: http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/species/birds/penguins/index.html
For a link to photos of emperor penguins,
please see: http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/species/birds/penguins/press_photos.html

The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization
with more than 320,000 members and online activists dedicated to the protection of
endangered species and wild places.
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