New research links the mummified remains of penguin chicks in Antarctica to two massive weather-related calamities that could become more commonplace with climate change.
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| Active penguin, colony in East Antarctica near the study site [Credit: Yuesong Gao] |
Taken individually, penguin carcasses are not unusual, explained Yuesong Gao, a co-author of the paper in Journal of Geophysical Research – Biogeosciences, published by the American Geophysical Union. But when the researchers studied the sediments in which they found the mummies, most of the carcasses turned out to be from two specific calamities that occurred in breeding colonies about 750 and 200 years ago, according to radiocarbon dating of the mummies and the sediments.
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| Penguin graveyard: 200-year-old abandoned penguin colony, littered with mummified carcasses [Credit: Yuesong Gao] |
The researchers were also struck by the unusually thick layers of sediments in which the mummies were buried. These were evidence of a lot of water flowing over the surface over a short period of time. That would require anomalously wet weather in hyper-arid Antarctica, and it's particularly deadly to penguin chicks which, unlike their parents, have not yet developed waterproof feathers. Snowy and rainy weather can soak chicks to the skin and sap away their body heat, causing them to weaken and die from hypothermia.
"We found that relatively short periods of climate anomaly in the past have caused terrible consequences to the penguin population," said Gao.
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| A mummified penguin chick, dated to 750 years ago [Credit: Yuesong Gao] |
The frequency of ZW3 anomalies has increased in the late 20th century, as the Earth's climate has changed in response to anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, according to previous research. As a result, some places in Antarctica have seen more snow accumulation between 1970 and 2009 than in the previous 1,000 years, the researchers report.
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| Another abandoned penguin colony with mummified carcasses. This graveyard is dated to 750 years ago. Living penguins can be seen in the upper left [Credit: Yuesong Gao] |
"We should pay attention to the threats of climate change to penguins," Gao said.
Author: Larry O'Hanlon | Source: American Geophysical Union [September 17, 2018]
This article was originally published on AGU Blogs. Read the original article.










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