Abstract

Seabird life history is typified by low fecundity, high adult survival rates, and relatively long lives. Such traits act as buffers, enabling persistence of populations under variable environmental conditions. Numerous studies, however, have suggested strong sensitivity of seabirds to environmental variability. In the Antarctic Peninsula region, for example, Adélie penguin (Pygoscelis adeliae) populations have declined during the last three decades, attributed largely to rapid changes in environmental conditions and food availability. We use 30 years of mark-recapture data from known-age individuals in the South Shetland Islands and capture-mark-recapture models to estimate survival rates with respect to such environmental variation. We investigated specifically whether negative trends in survival rates were evident and whether indices of global, regional, and local environmental conditions considered important for Adélie penguin survival explained the variability in survival rates. Overall, negative trends in juvenile survival were evident, but adult survival rates exhibited high interannual variability. Indices of sea ice extent had the strongest correlations with survival rates, particularly Weddell Sea ice extent during spring among adults (r = 0.62) and during winter for juveniles (r = 0.46). An analysis of deviance, however, suggested that single environmental covariates explained <30 % of the observed variation in the full mark-recapture models. Despite positive effects of sea ice extent on survival rates of Adélie penguins, limited explanatory power of several environmental conditions previously identified as important for Adélie penguin survival underscores the difficulty of predicting future population responses in this region of rapid environmental change.

Highlights

  • Life history traits that include low fecundity, high adult survival rates, and relatively long lives can act as buffers that enable persistence of populations under variable environmental conditions (Stearns 1992)

  • We investigated whether negative trends in survival rates were evident and whether indices of global, regional, and local environmental conditions considered important for Adelie penguin survival explained the variability in survival rates

  • Reductions in Adelie penguin population size and recruitment to the breeding population have been correlated with variation in winter sea ice extent and krill demography throughout their circumpolar range (Trathan et al 1996; Wilson et al 2001; Fraser and Hofmann 2003; Jenouvrier et al 2006; Hinke et al 2007)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Life history traits that include low fecundity, high adult survival rates, and relatively long lives can act as buffers that enable persistence of populations under variable environmental conditions (Stearns 1992). Long-term data on Antarctic seabirds dependent on sea ice habitats, including emperor (Aptenodytes forsteri) and Adelie penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae), and snow petrels (Pagodroma nivea) suggest that variation in the seasonal duration and spatial extent of winter sea ice can be important drivers of population change (Croxall et al 2002; Jenouvrier et al 2005; Emmerson and Southwell 2011). The weight of evidence suggests that Adelie penguins are sensitive to environmental variability

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call