The Japan Times - Ice melt threatens emperor penguins during annual moult: researchers

EUR -
AED 4.334737
AFN 75.525529
ALL 95.881466
AMD 441.917063
ANG 2.112211
AOA 1083.31549
ARS 1603.075182
AUD 1.645861
AWG 2.121051
AZN 2.066022
BAM 1.959615
BBD 2.376707
BDT 145.117428
BGN 1.968498
BHD 0.445359
BIF 3498.944146
BMD 1.180082
BND 1.501274
BOB 8.154185
BRL 5.895453
BSD 1.180037
BTN 110.210757
BWP 15.833361
BYN 3.367942
BYR 23129.613917
BZD 2.373311
CAD 1.620141
CDF 2720.089615
CHF 0.922703
CLF 0.026552
CLP 1044.998272
CNY 8.046096
CNH 8.045377
COP 4270.293169
CRC 541.572672
CUC 1.180082
CUP 31.272182
CVE 110.592079
CZK 24.328811
DJF 209.723804
DKK 7.472869
DOP 70.65741
DZD 155.85912
EGP 61.317196
ERN 17.701235
ETB 185.392267
FJD 2.616837
FKP 0.870055
GBP 0.869408
GEL 3.174072
GGP 0.870055
GHS 13.039978
GIP 0.870055
GMD 87.326249
GNF 10355.22245
GTQ 9.021793
GYD 246.880032
HKD 9.244682
HNL 31.414153
HRK 7.537304
HTG 154.405826
HUF 362.989781
IDR 20236.701058
ILS 3.537772
IMP 0.870055
INR 110.090295
IQD 1545.907869
IRR 1553135.873197
ISK 143.780918
JEP 0.870055
JMD 186.212512
JOD 0.836639
JPY 187.685606
KES 152.466874
KGS 103.198208
KHR 4738.030851
KMF 493.274192
KPW 1062.0765
KRW 1740.839773
KWD 0.364539
KYD 0.983348
KZT 559.828831
LAK 25926.40917
LBP 105676.373911
LKR 372.294234
LRD 217.459645
LSL 19.341493
LTL 3.484476
LVL 0.71382
LYD 7.469718
MAD 10.896585
MDL 20.178968
MGA 4882.000974
MKD 61.650608
MMK 2478.444883
MNT 4220.426749
MOP 9.523704
MRU 47.120637
MUR 54.50874
MVR 18.232617
MWK 2049.803468
MXN 20.358798
MYR 4.667228
MZN 75.472186
NAD 19.3417
NGN 1587.163757
NIO 43.332556
NOK 11.07574
NPR 176.336262
NZD 1.995926
OMR 0.453742
PAB 1.180042
PEN 4.060075
PGK 5.098251
PHP 70.852738
PKR 329.095429
PLN 4.233903
PYG 7541.93802
QAR 4.302285
RON 5.090287
RSD 117.368644
RUB 89.097009
RWF 1724.100303
SAR 4.427253
SBD 9.497991
SCR 16.673669
SDG 709.229225
SEK 10.806362
SGD 1.499997
SHP 0.881051
SLE 29.089051
SLL 24745.73216
SOS 674.415556
SRD 44.16457
STD 24425.321917
STN 24.958742
SVC 10.325101
SYP 130.498678
SZL 19.341328
THB 37.795091
TJS 11.151434
TMT 4.136189
TND 3.402763
TOP 2.841355
TRY 52.808808
TTD 8.009899
TWD 37.298273
TZS 3062.31346
UAH 51.388842
UGX 4360.636942
USD 1.180082
UYU 47.462398
UZS 14362.186962
VES 564.059144
VND 31071.568083
VUV 140.441646
WST 3.222458
XAF 657.258807
XAG 0.014892
XAU 0.000246
XCD 3.189231
XCG 2.126703
XDR 0.816497
XOF 656.125573
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.571994
ZAR 19.311457
ZMK 10622.156889
ZMW 22.626912
ZWL 379.986033
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    0.2000

    23.03

    +0.87%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    22.71

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    -1.0900

    87.86

    -1.24%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    17.6

    -0.34%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    15.59

    -0.19%

  • BCC

    -2.8100

    78.91

    -3.56%

  • RIO

    -0.3100

    98.56

    -0.31%

  • BCE

    -0.0300

    23.82

    -0.13%

  • JRI

    0.0935

    12.88

    +0.73%

  • RELX

    0.9700

    35.68

    +2.72%

  • GSK

    -1.3700

    57.81

    -2.37%

  • BTI

    -0.8300

    56.68

    -1.46%

  • AZN

    -3.1700

    201.21

    -1.58%

  • BP

    -0.0500

    46.12

    -0.11%

Ice melt threatens emperor penguins during annual moult: researchers
Ice melt threatens emperor penguins during annual moult: researchers / Photo: Richard Gill - DEPARTMENT OF CONSERVATION/AFP

Ice melt threatens emperor penguins during annual moult: researchers

Emperor penguins shed all their feathers once a year, a precarious ritual that may have become deadly as climate change pushes them into shrinking patches of Antarctic sea ice, researchers said Wednesday.

Text size:

The flightless birds moult during summer, relying on stored fat to survive for several weeks until their waterproof coat grows back so they can swim and hunt in icy waters again.

Researchers from the British Antarctic Survey, analysing seven years of satellite images, accidentally discovered several moulting colonies along the extremely remote coastline of an area known as Marie Byrd Land.

As sea ice melted, the penguins were forced onto smaller spaces in increasingly large and tightly packed groups, the UK polar research organisation said in a statement.

In 2025, only 25 small groups of penguins were visible in the satellite images, it said. Prior to 2022, more than 100 groups had been spotted in the same region.

"While we don't know for sure what happened to those penguins, we know they can find new suitable breeding sites after ice loss, so it's possible they have established new moulting sites elsewhere," said Peter Fretwell, lead author and mapping expert at the British Antarctic Survey.

"But also it's possible that huge numbers of penguins perished after entering the Southern Ocean before they had replaced their waterproof feathers," Fretwell said.

"If this has happened, the situation for emperors as a species is even worse than we thought."

The researchers said that if emperor penguins are forced into the ocean before their feathers are replaced, they face exhaustion from increased energy use, hypothermia and increased risk from predators.

- Ice at record low -

Emperor penguin populations have shrunk by almost a quarter as global warming transforms their icy habitat, the British Antarctic Survey said in research published last year.

During the January-March Antarctic summer, emperor penguins from the Ross Sea in West Antarctica migrate as much as 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) to Marie Byrd Land to moult on stable sea ice, the researchers said Wednesday.

It is one of the few areas that historically retains its fast ice -- sea ice attached to the coast -- throughout the year.

The moulting process takes about four to five weeks and the penguins cannot go in the freezing water during that time.

The extent of Antarctic Sea ice fell to record lows between 2022 and 2024, accompanied by a drastic decrease in fast ice, the British Antarctic Survey said.

In the region they observed, sea ice coverage fell from a 50-year average of 500,000 square kilometres -- roughly the size of Spain -- to 100,000 square kilometres in 2023. Only 2,000 square kilometres of fast ice were left near the coast.

During those years, the sea ice broke before the penguins had finished moulting, raising fears that many may not have survived, the scientists said.

The survey's previous study found that some emperor penguin colonies lost all their chicks in recent years as the ice broke, plunging hatchlings into the sea before they were old enough to cope with the freezing ocean.

At current rates of warming, there is a 45 percent chance the species will become extinct by the turn of the century, the survey said.

S.Fujimoto--JT