Remember when we were told "Penguins Don’t Migrate, they’re dying!" ? – never mind

WUWT readers may remember this story from last year, where Chris Turney, leader of the ill fated “ship of fools” Spirit of Mawson expedition that go stuck in Antarctic sea ice said: “Penguins Don’t Migrate, they’re dying!” and of course blamed the dreaded “climate change” as the reason. Of course three days later, Discover Magazine ran an article that suggested Turney was full of Penguin Poop.

Well, seems there’s a surplus of Penguins now, in a place nobody thought to look, there’s an extra 1.5 million Penguins. From Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute.

h/t to WUWT reader Lewis P. Buckingham.


Previously Unknown “Supercolony” of Adelie Penguins Discovered in Antarctica

For the past 40 years, the total number of Adélie Penguins, one of the most common on the Antarctic Peninsula, has been steadily declining—or so biologists have thought. A new study led by researchers from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), however, is providing new insights on this species of penguin.

In a paper released on March 2nd in the journal Scientific Reports, the scientists announced the discovery of a previously unknown “supercolony” of more than 1,500,000 Adélie Penguins in the Danger Islands, a chain of remote, rocky islands off of the Antarctic Peninsula’s northern tip.

“Until recently, the Danger Islands weren’t known to be an important penguin habitat,” says co-PI Heather Lynch, Associate Professor of Ecology & Evolution at Stony Brook University.  These supercolonies have gone undetected for decades, she notes, partly because of the remoteness of the islands themselves, and partly the treacherous waters that surround them. Even in the austral summer, the nearby ocean is filled with thick sea ice, making it extremely difficult to access.

Yet in 2014, Lynch and colleague Mathew Schwaller from NASA discovered telltale guano stains in existing NASA satellite imagery of the islands, hinting at a mysteriously large number of penguins. To find out for sure, Lynch teamed with Stephanie Jenouvrier, a seabird ecologist at WHOI, Mike Polito at LSU and Tom Hart at Oxford University to arrange an expedition to the islands with the goal of counting the birds firsthand.

When the group arrived in December 2015, they found hundreds of thousands of birds nesting in the rocky soil, and immediately started to tally up their numbers by hand. The team also used a modified commercial quadcopter drone to take images of the entire island from above.

“The drone lets you fly in a grid over the island, taking pictures once per second. You can then stitch them together into a huge collage that shows the entire landmass in 2D and 3D,” says co-PI Hanumant Singh, Professor of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering at Northeastern University, who developed the drone’s imaging and navigation system. Once those massive images are available, he says, his team can use neural network software to analyze them, pixel by pixel, searching for penguin nests autonomously.

The accuracy that the drone enabled was key, says Michael Polito, coauthor from Louisiana State University and a guest investigator at WHOI. The number of penguins in the Danger Islands could provide insight not just on penguin population dynamics, but also on the effects of changing temperature and sea ice on the region’s ecology.

“Not only do the Danger Islands hold the largest population of Adélie penguins on the Antarctic Peninsula, they also appear to have not suffered the population declines found along the western side of Antarctic Peninsula that are associated with recent climate change,” says Polito.

Being able to get an accurate count of the birds in this supercolony offers a valuable benchmark for future change, as well, notes Jenouvrier. “The population of Adélies on the east side of the Antarctic Peninsula is different from what we see on the west side, for example. We want to understand why. Is it linked to the extended sea ice condition over there? Food availability? That’s something we don’t know,” she says.

It will also lend valuable evidence for supporting proposed Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) near the Antarctic Peninsula, adds Mercedes Santos, from the Instituto Antártico Argentino (who is not affiliated with this study but is one of the authors of the MPA proposal) with the Commission for the Conservation of the Antarctic Marine Living Resources, an international panel that decides on the placement of MPAs. “Given that MPA proposals are based in the best available science, this publication helps to highlight the importance of this area for protection,” she says.

Also collaborating on the study: Alex Borowicz, Philip McDowall, Casey Youngflesh, Mathew Schwaller, and Rachael Herman from Stony Brook University; Thomas Sayre-McCord from WHOI and MIT; Stephen Forrest and Melissa Rider from Antarctic Resource, Inc.; Tom Hart from Oxford University; and Gemma Clucas from Southampton University. The team utilized autonomous robotics technology from Northeastern University.

Funding for this research was provided by a grant to the Wood Hole Oceanographic Institution from the Dalio Ocean Initiative. Logistical support was provided by Golden Fleece Expeditions and Quark Expeditions.

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eyesonu
March 3, 2018 1:29 am

A new government funded research paper will soon be released showing that this newly found colony of penguins is endangered by rising global temps as their population has been reduced by 97% since records began.

March 3, 2018 1:59 am

At least they admit that the reason these penguins are thriving is that researchers cant get to them.
That’s quite a big admission.
Much of their catastrophism about penguins, frogs, turtles etc. is of their own making.

tty
Reply to  ptolemy2
March 3, 2018 3:02 am

Actually Antarctic penguins tend to utterly ignore people. There is a large Gentoo Penguin colony at Port Lockroy that is visited by almost all touist cruises. They used to keep half of it fenced off in the hope of proving that tourists disturbed the penguins, but they gave it up a few years ago since the breeding results were always better in the “tourist part”. The tourist shooed away the Skuas that normally eats a lot of the cute little penguin chicks.

Julian Flood
Reply to  tty
March 3, 2018 3:08 am

When I went to a gentoo colony on the Falklands the skuas used my distraction to nip in and grab at the chicks. They didn’t try it with the albatross though – they are seriously big.
JF

Ed Zuiderwijk
March 3, 2018 2:57 am

Am penguin, will travel.

tty
March 3, 2018 2:57 am

The talk about how remote and unaccessible Danger Islands are seems somewhat excessive. The nearest airport (Marambio) is 130 kilometers away and there are three permanent scientific bases within a 150 km radius (Marambio, O’Higgins and Fortin Sgto Cabral). As a matter of fact I’ve been within 150 km from the place myself underway from Elephant Island to Deception Island.

Peta of Newark
March 3, 2018 3:00 am

Please please please..
just leave them alone.
OK?
just this once
let them be
Thank you in advance

daveburton
March 3, 2018 4:15 am

It’s the very tip of the tip of the Antarctic Peninsula, so it probably has just about the mildest climate in all of Antarctica.
http://sealevel.info/danger_islands_680x461.jpg
Yet we’re supposed to believe that warming threatens the penguins? Seriously??
Actually, the penguins seem to prefer a warmer climate than most of Antarctica currently has. Unfortunately for the penguins, “polar amplification” of global warming seems to only work in the northern hemisphere (and nobody knows why). Even the Antarctic Peninsula (contrary to widespread misinformation) isn’t warming significantly, and Doran et al 2002† found that, although the Earth as a whole experienced 0.06°C/decade of warming during the 20th century, there was “a net cooling on the Antarctic continent between 1966 and 2000, particularly during summer and autumn.”
† Yes, that Doran!

icisil
Reply to  daveburton
March 3, 2018 6:50 am

There’s also volcanism in that area. If there are subsurface hot springs, that’s where I’d want to be.

tty
Reply to  daveburton
March 3, 2018 8:15 am

There are essentially four truly arctic penguin species: gentoo, chinstrap, adelie and emperor.
The other 14 species life in subarctic to tropical waters (yes, tropical, the Galapagos penguin breeds almost exactly on the Equator).

daveburton
Reply to  daveburton
March 4, 2018 12:11 am

The “progressive” site DailyKOS also ran a version of this Woods Hole story, so I posted a similar comment there. Since I know their modus operandi I then immediately took a screenshot.
Predictably, they immediately deleted the comment. That’s the Left’s usual response to differing opinions and inconvenient information: censorship!
Since they obviously know that “their side” can’t prevail in an open exchange of ideas, at some level they must also know that they’re arguing against the truth, though I don’t suppose they ever admit it, even to themselves.
http://sealevel.info/dailykos_cmt_69447414_censored.png

daveburton
Reply to  daveburton
March 4, 2018 11:31 am

BTW, “Pakalolo” (the handle chosen by the pseudonymous DailyKOS poster of this story) is Hawaiian slang for “pot” (“choom“), or “pothead.” As if that lot needs chemical help to get stupid.

Sara
March 3, 2018 4:18 am

…. waiting for the news that the Adelies have posted a sign that says ‘Off limits to humans and polar bears’.
They need a good lawyer. Think of the penguin chicks!

John Gill
March 3, 2018 4:19 am

Environmentalists have always suffered from a surfeit of do-goodism and it inevitably leads to a sense of moral superiority with which researchers/perpetrators justify their, quite often, inhumane interventions. I recoil from images of wild creatures being sedated, collared, tagged or otherwise molested in the name of science. The use of drones is just another brick in the wall.

mwhite
March 3, 2018 4:42 am

“UK team set for giant Antarctic iceberg expedition”
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-43008058

mwhite
Reply to  mwhite
March 3, 2018 4:44 am

“Mission to giant A-68 berg thwarted by sea-ice”
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-43257289

DB
March 3, 2018 5:09 am

Adelie penguin behavior may not be suitable for tourists….
http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2012/06/11/penguins-explicit-sex-acts-shocked-polar-explorer.html
Hidden for nearly 100 years for being too “graphic,” a report of “hooligan” behaviors, including sexual coercion, by Adelie penguins observed during Captain Scott’s 1910 polar expedition have been uncovered and interpreted….
“Some of the things he noticed profoundly shocked him,” Russell said. For instance, Levick noted the penguins’ autoerotic tendencies, and the seemingly aberrant behavior of young unpaired males and females, including necrophilia, sexual coercion, sexual and physical abuse of chicks, non-procreative sex and homosexual behaviors.

Steve C
Reply to  DB
March 3, 2018 10:23 am

Ha! Missed that one! Strangely reminiscent of Dead Duck Day

lewispbuckingham
March 3, 2018 5:24 am

The relative isolation of this colony and an assured food supply must be its reason for continued existence.
Once man invades other pathogens will end up in the colony.
Fruit fly just made it to Tasmania.
Newcastle disease is a potential co morbidity pathogen for penguins.
https://www.askjpc.org/vspo/show_page.php?id=471
All that needs happen is that the colony be infected with an immune suppressing virus such as Avian Influenza, carried by scientific teams, a real threat
https://www.timeslive.co.za/news/sci-tech/2018-02-19-african-penguins-succumb-to-avian-flu-in-the-cape/
The climate in the Antarctic has failed to support the CO2 hypotheses of catastrophic global warming.
However a virulent strain of influenza, rapidly mutating in such a vast colony, would lead to mass deaths.
A little like what happens in broiler farms.
http://www.nadis.org.uk/bulletins/avian-influenza.aspx
Australian and International teams performing this valuable work studying this colony must be aware of the biosecurity hazard they pose to the welfare of these protected creatures.
If there were a sudden outbreak of bird flu, this may not be explainable by migratory water birds being the vectors.
From their work, this is a competent team.
It needs to remain in safe hands.

jorgekafkazar
Reply to  lewispbuckingham
March 3, 2018 1:59 pm

WHOI has a good reputation. Note that they are not connected to the so-called “Woods Hole Research Center” in any way other than location.

John
March 3, 2018 5:26 am

Birds, including penguins, fish, insects, virtually all wildlife and even plants always migrate toward better living conditions. Only humans pick a spot and stay there, and if things change, they blame humans…yet humans live in virtually EVERY climate on earth, though not many in some of the worst.

March 3, 2018 5:39 am

The gutter legacy Media is full of “OMG all the penguins are dying!” lies though nevertheless. Who would be a journo these days? They appear as some kind of Machiavellian child-catchers whose sole aim in life is to scare little children. Truly vile people without a moral to share between them. I’ll exempt Booker and Delingpole though who stand on their principles still.

March 3, 2018 5:42 am

I once worked with a researcher who would always say “we don’t know what we don’t know” and usually after some idle conclusion by someone he would say “randomness is the mother of all superstition”. While if you say something frequently it looses it’s power, every scientist should push refresh on both of those admonishments. This paper fully demonstrates a lack of scientific candor.

JohnWho
Reply to  Steve Lohr
March 3, 2018 6:20 am

“we don’t know what we don’t know”
I believe that would be one of those “unknown unknowns” that Donald Rumsfeld spoke about.

icisil
March 3, 2018 6:02 am

Well it’s always good to see that the spirit of scientific inquiry is still alive. I’m cynical enough to think that if climatologists were in charge the money for that field expedition would have been spent on more computer time rather than actual investigative field research.

PiperPaul
March 3, 2018 6:54 am

Is this an example of the Streetlight Effect?

PiperPaul
March 3, 2018 6:59 am

Penguins are also often found on TV, but not in such large quantities.comment image

Jeremy
March 3, 2018 7:48 am

George Tetley
That strange experience at sea may have been a volcano forming at the sea floor.

Myron Mesecke
March 3, 2018 8:55 am

They kept telling us the Penguins were in danger.
Just didn’t realize they meant they were in the Danger Islands.

March 3, 2018 9:11 am

more than 1,500,000 Adélie Penguins in the Danger Islands, a chain of remote, rocky islands off of the Antarctic Peninsula’s northern tip.
Alarmist headline — The penguins are in Danger! /rim-shot
Seriously, I was always hearing the Peninsula was the very place it was so drastically heating up! And now this? What are those penguins thinking by living there?

J Mac
Reply to  beng135
March 3, 2018 10:35 am

Penguin thoughts:
“Danger Islands??? Hmmm – It’s warmer here and closer to open water here, with huge ‘bait balls’ of anchovies just a quick dip away. Lottsa pretty pebbles to keep ‘she who must be obeyed’ happy. No more trudging over 15 miles of broken ice in blizzards, just to get supper for the kids. And no signs of those damn penguin molesting humans! What’s not to like??!!”

Original Mike M
March 3, 2018 9:38 am

They paid me good money to relocate them to where the sea lions wouldn’t find them but then these researchers come along and just can’t keep a secret.

Snarling Dolphin
March 3, 2018 11:07 am

Anybody who thought that shouldn’t call themselves a biologist. Crappy biologist I could live with, but not biologist. “…or so crappy biologists have thought.” See? Much better.

March 3, 2018 12:25 pm

I wrote this up yesterday after I saw the article in the WSJ.
Who are you going to believe… Al Gore or your own eyes?
From the learned and always well-informed and objective Al Gore we get:
“In recent years, the loss of sea ice in this part of Antarctica has led to a dramatic decline in the phytoplankton and devastated the krill. As a result, the population of Adelie penguins has declined 80% in the northwestern Antarctic Peninsula over the past 30 years.”
https://www.climaterealityproject.org/…/fate-adelie-penguins
Meanwhile in the real world, where real data counts more than fund raising efforts from the soft hearted and soft headed:
“Dr. Lynch and her colleagues calculate that the entire Adélie penguin population in Antarctica now numbers more than 4.5 million breeding pairs—about 1.5 million more pairs than known 20 years ago.
When they examined old aerial photographs of the region taken in 1957, they found evidence that the penguins were already in residence on the islands. “All the evidence suggests that population there has been stable since the late 1950s,” Dr. Lynch said. ”
https://www.wsj.com/…/the-secret-is-out-scientists-spot-pen…
I am not going to hold my breadth until I hear of an acknowledgement from Al Gore et al

Dr Deanster
March 3, 2018 12:26 pm

Soooo …. I wonder what penguin taste like.

March 3, 2018 2:36 pm

Professor Turkey will have to mount yet another expedition through the rapidly growing ice floes to move those 1.5 million Penguins back to where they ought to be so that the Global Warming Meme can continue undisturbed. It is wonderful the way that the Warmistas manage to show that every contrary evidence means that there is a need to protect almost anything even more and act now against ‘Climate Change”.

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