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05 April 2018

Penguins go through the flow

SUBANTARCTIC – Colonies of breeding king penguins behave much like particles in liquids do, according to a new study by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) and international colleagues. This "liquid" organisation and structure enables breeding colonies to protect themselves against predators while also keeping members together.

A king penguin breeding colony on
Possession Island, Crozet Archipelago.
Photo by © Céline Le Bohec (CNRS / IPEV / CSM)  
King penguins are threatened by climate change with warming temperatures shifting their main food sources farther south. The new information on how penguin colonies form and structure themselves –and how colonies may depend on the physical features of new breeding grounds – is crucial to predicting the species' resilience.

"King penguin colonies are also of special interest because only they and emperor penguins do not build nests, and no one has previously examined the effect this has on their colonies," said Richard Gerum, a Ph.D. student at the University of Erlangen-Nuernberg and lead author of the paper published in the Journal of Physics D.

Instead of building nests, king penguin pairs lay a single egg per breeding season, which the parents take turns incubating and protecting by carrying the egg on their feet. Breeding pairs and individuals form very large and dense colonies.

To investigate penguins’ colony structure, the research team used aerial photographs taken from a helicopter to record the positions of thousands of individual animals and breeding pairs over several years at two colonies on Crozet and Kerguelen islands. The images were then analysed using radial distribution function, a mathematical relationship that helps describe how the atoms pack around one another in solids, liquids or gases.

The team ran computer simulations of the penguin breeding colonies’ movements and found that they resemble the movements of molecules in a 2D liquid, as they attract and repel one another in a constrained planar space.

"This liquid state is a compromise between density – or how compact the colony is – and flexibility, which allows the colony to adapt to both internal and external changes," explained senior author Daniel Zitterbart, a physicist at WHOI and adjunct scientist at the University of Erlangen-Nuernberg.

"For example, if a pair loses or abandons their egg, it leaves a vacancy in the colony, but we never see vacant spots in our aerial images. Presumably those are filled by penguins that had occupied a less preferred breeding spot."

King penguins have a very long breeding cycle of more than 14 months, which leads to a constant mixture of early and late breeders. Zitterbart said the next step in the research is to develop methods to remotely assess the state of breeding colonies. Most colonies are remote and are rarely visited, and only few aerial pictures exist.

"This publication is a first comprehensive quantitative assessment of the structure and dynamics within king penguin colonies and a first step in developing higher-order colony descriptors, which eventually can help to remotely assess the species vulnerability," Zitterbart said.

Source
Penguins go through the flow [news release], 5 April 2018, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

Journal citation
Gerum, R., Richter, S., Fabry, B., Le Bohec, C., Bonadonna, F., Nesterova, A., & Zitterbart, D.P. (2018). Structural organisation and dynamics in king penguin colonies. Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics, 51(16).

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