The West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP) and adjacent Scotia Sea support abundant wildlife populations, many of which were nearly extirpated by humans. This region is also among the fastestwarming areas on the planet, with 5-6°C increases in mean winter air temperatures and associated decreases in winter sea-ice cover. These biological and physical perturbations have affected the ecosystem profoundly. One hypothesis guiding ecological interpretations of changes in top predator populations in this region, the "sea-ice hypothesis," proposes that reductions in winter sea ice have led directly to declines in "ice-loving" species by decreasing their winter habitat, while populations of "ice-avoiding" species have increased. However, 30 y of field studies and recent surveys of penguins throughout the WAP and Scotia Sea demonstrate this mechanism is not controlling penguin populations; populations of both ice-loving Adélie and ice-avoiding chinstrap penguins have declined significantly. We argue in favor of an alternative, more robust hypothesis that attributes both increases and decreases in penguin populations to changes in the abundance of their main prey, Antarctic krill. Unlike many other predators in this region, Adélie and chinstrap penguins were never directly harvested by man; thus, their population trajectories track the impacts of biological and environmental changes in this ecosystem. Linking trends in penguin abundance with trends in krill biomass explains why populations of Adélie and chinstrap penguins increased after competitors (fur seals, baleen whales, and some fishes) were nearly extirpated in the 19th to mid-20th centuries and currently are decreasing in response to climate change.S ea ice plays a critical role in structuring ecosystem dynamics throughout the West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP) and Scotia Sea, and variations in sea-ice extent are hypothesized to affect penguin populations directly. As seasonal sea-ice extent and duration declines in this region, the Adélie penguin (Pygoscelis adeliae), which favors pack-ice habitat in winter, should decline in population size, whereas the closely related chinstrap penguin (Pygoscelis antarctica), which forages in ice-free water during winter, should increase (1-5). The foundation for this hypothesis is based on a short (7-y) series of simultaneously observed decreases in nesting populations of Adélie penguins and increases in chinstrap penguins following winters with low sea ice in the South Shetland Islands during the 1970s and 1980s (1). However there now is overwhelming evidence that, in contrast to expectations, both Adélie and chinstrap penguin populations are declining throughout the WAP and broader Scotia Sea region.
Results and DiscussionAdélie and chinstrap penguin populations have declined more than 50% during the last 30 y at study colonies in the South Shetland Islands (Fig. 1A). Moreover, since 1987, interannual changes in Adélie and chinstrap breeding populations have been positively correlated (Pearson's r = 0.7; P < 0.001; n = 21; Fig. 1B). T...
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