Going with the floe: Sea‐ice movement affects distance and destination during Adélie penguin winter movements

Author:

Jongsomjit Dennis12ORCID,Lescroël Amelie1ORCID,Schmidt Annie E.1ORCID,Lisovski Simeon3,Ainley David G.4,Hines Ellen25,Elrod Megan1,Dugger Katie M.6,Ballard Grant1

Affiliation:

1. Point Blue Conservation Science Petaluma California USA

2. Department of Geography and Environment San Francisco State University San Francisco California USA

3. Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research Potsdam Germany

4. HT Harvey & Associates San Jose California USA

5. Estuary & Ocean Science Center, San Francisco State University Tiburon California USA

6. US Geological Survey, Oregon Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Sciences Oregon State University Corvallis Oregon USA

Abstract

AbstractSeasonal migration, driven by shifts in annual climate cycles and resources, is a key part of the life history and ecology of species across taxonomic groups. By influencing the amount of energy needed to move, external forces such as wind and ocean currents are often key drivers of migratory pathways exposing individuals to varying resources, environmental conditions, and competition pressures impacting individual fitness and population dynamics. Although wildlife movements in connection with wind and ocean currents are relatively well understood, movements within sea‐ice fields have been much less studied, despite sea ice being an integral part of polar ecology. Adélie penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae) in the southern Ross Sea, Antarctica, currently exist at the southernmost edge of their range and undergo the longest (~12,000 km) winter migration known for the species. Within and north of the Ross Sea, the Ross Gyre drives ocean circulation and the large‐scale movement of sea ice. We used remotely sensed sea‐ice movement data together with geolocation‐based penguin movement data to test the hypothesis that penguins use gyre‐driven sea‐ice movement to aid their migration. We found that penguins traveled greater distances when their movement vectors were aligned with those of sea ice (i.e., ice support) and the amount of ice support received depended on which route a penguin took. We also found that birds that took an eastern route traveled significantly further north in two of the 3 years we examined, coinciding with higher velocities of sea ice in those years. We compare our findings to patterns observed in migrating species that utilize air or water currents for their travel and with other studies showing the importance of ocean/sea‐ice circulation patterns to wildlife movement and life history patterns within the Ross Sea. Changes in sea ice may have consequences not only for energy expenditure but, by altering migration and movement pathways, to the ecological interactions that exist in this region.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

National Science Foundation

NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference94 articles.

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