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Supplementary material from "Advances in remote sensing of emperor penguins: first multi-year time series documenting trends in the global population"

Version 2 2024-03-07, 02:36
Version 1 2024-02-28, 06:30
Posted on 2024-02-28 - 06:30
Like many polar animals, emperor penguin populations are challenging to monitor because of the species' life history and remoteness. Consequently, it has been difficult to establish its global status, a subject important to resolve as polar environments change. To advance our understanding of emperor penguins, we combined remote sensing, validation surveys and using Bayesian modelling we estimated a comprehensive population trajectory over a recent 10-year period, encompassing the entirety of the species’ range. Reported as indices of abundance, our study indicates with 81% probability that there were fewer emperor adult emperor penguins in 2018 than in 2009, with a posterior median decrease of 9.6% (95% credible interval (CI) −26.4% to +9.4%). The global population trend was −1.3% per year over this period (95% CI = −3.3% to +1.0%) and declines likely occurred in four of eight fast ice regions, irrespective of habitat conditions. Thus far, explanations have yet to be identified regarding trends, especially as we observed an apparent population uptick toward the end of time series. Our work potentially establishes a framework for monitoring other Antarctic coastal species detectable by satellite, while promoting a need for research to better understand factors driving biotic changes in the Southern Ocean ecosystem.

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Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences

AUTHORS (23)

Michelle LaRue
David Iles
Sara Labrousse
Peter Fretwell
David Ortega
Eileen Devane
Isabella Horstmann
Lise Viollat
Rose Foster-Dyer
Céline Le Bohec
Daniel Zitterbart
Aymeric Houstin
Sebastian Richter
Alexander Winterl
Barbara Wienecke
Leo Salas
Monique Nixon
Christophe Barbraud
Gerald Kooyman
Paul Ponganis
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