Mar 23, 2012
Three penguin species that share the Western Antarctic Peninsula for breeding grounds have been affected in different ways by the higher temperatures brought on by global warming, according to Stony Brook University Ecology and Evolution Assistant Professor Heather Lynch and colleagues. The work by Lynch and her team is contained in three papers that have been published online in Polar Biology, Ecology and Marine Ecology Progress Series (MEPS).Lynch and her colleagues used a combination of field work and, increasingly, satellite imagery to track colonies of three penguin species – Adélie, chinstrap and gentoo. The Adélie and chinstrap migrate to the peninsula to breed, while the gentoo are year-round residents.
The Antarctic is considered one of the world’s most rapidly warming regions. Warmer temperatures move up the breeding cycle, causing the penguins to lay their eggs earlier. The resident gentoo population is able to adapt more quickly and advance their “clutch initiation” by almost twice as much as the other species. Lynch believes this may allow them to better compete for the best nesting space. The Adélie and chinstrap are unaware of the local conditions until they arrive to breed and have not been able to advance their breeding cycles as rapidly.
In addition, the gentoo prefer areas with less sea ice, and have been able to migrate further south into the Antarctic as the sea ice shrinks. The chinstrap and Adélie species rely more heavily on the abundance of Antarctic krill, which require sea ice for their lifecycle.
The result – the gentoo numbers are increasing while the other two species have noticeably dwindling populations on the Antarctic Peninsula.
Professor Lynch will speak about her research and advances in the use of satellite imagery to track penguin populations as part of “Polar Climate Change Research: A Workshop for Educators” at the Charles B. Wang Center at Stony Brook University on April 10-11, 2012. The workshop, sponsored by the joint BNL-SBU Center for Impacts of Regional Climate Change (CIRCC), is designed to give high school science teachers the tools they need to teach about climate change in the Polar regions.
Registration is free, and the deadline to register is March 27. Forms can be downloaded from http://lynchlab.com and emailed to polar_ws@life.bio.sunysb.edu or mailed to: Dr. Heather Lynch, Ecology and Evolution Department, 640 Life Sciences Bldg., Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY 11794.
“We want teachers to walk away with a concrete set of resources and a lesson plan for teaching about polar science and climate change,” Lynch said.
One of those resources is Google Earth, where the scientists have uploaded their satellite imagery of penguins and other species that live or breed in the Polar regions. Lynch said the use of Google Earth has helped to “democratize the science” in that anyone can view the images.
Satellite imagery has advanced the science of tracking penguin populations, drastically reducing the time needed to do a census and even helping to find previously unknown colonies. What took weeks to accomplish through field work can now be done in hours through the use of satellites.
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