Melting ice imperils 98% of emperor penguin colonies by 2100
10,000 penguin chicks drowned this year at Halley's Bay, Antarctica, after ice broke up early
With climate change threatening the sea ice habitat of emperor penguins, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Tuesday announced a proposal to list the species as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.
"The life cycle of emperor penguins is tied to having stable sea ice, which they need to breed, to feed and to moult," said Stephanie Jenouvrier, a penguin ecologist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
Research published Tuesday in the journal Global Change Biology,found that by 2100, 98 per cent of emperor penguin colonies may be pushed to the brink of extinction if no changes are made to current rates of carbon emissions and climate change.
Around 70 per cent of colonies will be in danger sooner, by 2050.
The new study looked at overall warming trends and the increasing likelihood of extreme weather fluctuations due to global warming. And it noted that extremely low levels of sea ice in 2016 led to a massive breeding failure of an emperor penguin colony in Antarctica's Halley Bay.
That year, seasonal sea ice broke up before penguin chicks had time to develop waterproof adult feathers, and about 10,000 baby birds drowned, Jenouvrier said. The colony did not recover.
Emperor penguins breed exclusively in Antarctica during winter. They endure temperatures of -40 C and wind speeds approaching 144 km/h by huddling together in groups of several thousand birds. But they can't survive without sufficient sea ice.
"These penguins are hard hit by the climate crisis, and the U.S. government is finally recognizing that threat," said Sarah Uhlemann, international program director at the nonprofit Center for Biological Diversity.
What a U.S. endangered species listing means
The U.S. government has previously listed species outside the country as threatened, including the polar bear, which lives in Arctic regions and is also imperilled by climate change and sea ice loss.
Emperor penguins — the world's largest penguins — currently number about 270,000 to 280,000 breeding pairs, or 625,000 to 650,000 individuals. The proposed listing will be published in the Federal Register on Wednesday to open to a 60-day public comment period.
Listing the bird provides protections such as prohibition against importing them for commercial purposes. Potential impacts on penguins must also be evaluated by U.S. marine fisheries currently operating in Antarctica.
"Climate change, a priority challenge for this administration, impacts a variety of species throughout the world," said Martha Williams, principal deputy director of the wildlife service. "The decisions made by policymakers today and during the next few decades will determine the fate of the emperor penguin."