Yahoo – AFP,
Lawrence Bartlett, 4 Dec 2015
Cape Town (AFP) - In the cold, clear waters at Boulders Beach in Cape Town, the African penguins are so relaxed they swim among humans and waddle past sunbathers on the sands.
![]() |
Africa's
only nesting penguin has been classified as endangered likely as
a result of
competition for food from commercial fisheries and shifting fish
stocks (AFP
Photo/Stephane De Sakutin)
|
Cape Town (AFP) - In the cold, clear waters at Boulders Beach in Cape Town, the African penguins are so relaxed they swim among humans and waddle past sunbathers on the sands.
But their
unique species is dying, and scientists are trying to solve the mystery of
whether it is humans that are killing them, and if so, how.
As
representatives from over 150 countries huddle at a Paris conference aimed at
achieving a global agreement on fighting climate change, the scientific
sleuthing off Africa's southwestern coast highlights the difficulties in
pinning down the links between global warming and animal behaviour.
![]() |
Young
African penguins head out to
sea, after being released at Stony Point
about 130
km from Cape Town (AFP
Photo/Rodger Bosch)
|
The number
of breeding pairs has dropped by 90 percent at South African colonies north of
Cape Town, from about 32,000 in 2004 to just over 3,000 in 2014, according to
official statistics.
There is
little dispute that the reason for the sharp decline in the number of little
jackass penguins -- so nicknamed for their braying calls -- is the strange
behaviour of their main prey, sardines and anchovies.
The
concentrations of fish have moved southwards and eastwards, leaving the
penguins dying of hunger in their wake.
A search
for answers
Scientists
say an obvious culprit might appear to be overfishing, but there is some
dispute about whether this is borne out by the results of periodic fishing bans
around some of the penguins' major habitats.
"The
fish have seemingly changed their distribution, but what caused that is still a
big research question," said Rob Crawford, a scientist with South Africa's
department of environmental affairs.
"Overfishing
and climate change are the main two possibilities and it is very hard to
disentangle them," he told AFP.
There is no
question that humans were responsible for an initial steep decline in the
number of African penguins, which are classified as endangered by the
International for the Conservation of Nature.
The
environmental affairs department says the overall South African population may
have been around a million breeding pairs in the 1920s -- dropping to just
19,000 in 2012.
The
exploitation of eggs for human consumption played a major role in the early
disastrous decline, but egg collection was banned in 1967 and numbers have
continued to plummet.
The
population in Namibia has also fallen sharply, from 12,162 breeding pairs in
1978 to an estimated 4,563 pairs in 2008, according to Birdlife International.
"There
is no clear cut answer that climate change (over long-term environmental
variation) is a driver, but it is thought to be playing an important
role," says Richard Sherley, a University of Exeter researcher and expert
on the African penguin.
"Changes
in sea surface temperatures in the 1990s and early 2000s have resulted in
(amongst other things) a change in the area most suitable for spawning for
anchovy and sardine," he told AFP in an email interview.
"As a
result, the high-energy prey that the adults of these fish species represent
for penguins is far from the penguin colonies on South Africa’s West Coast for
much of the year."
Time to
move?
A plan to
establish a new colony for penguins on the south coast, closer to their
shifting food source, is among proposals aimed at saving the species.
Before
penguins are moved to the chosen site, it will be prepared to make it seem like
an established colony, says Birdlife South Africa.
Decoys,
sound recordings and mirrors will be used to give the illusion of penguins
using the colony, and penguin chicks and young will be released there.
One of the
colonies hardest hit is on Cape Town's Robben Island, where late liberation
icon Nelson Mandela and other anti-apartheid activists were imprisoned.
Thousands
of kilometres to the south, in Antarctica, the charismatic Emperor penguins --
the inspiration for the Oscar-winning animated film "Happy Feet" --
are also threatened by rising temperatures, international researchers have
warned.
In Paris,
delegates to the climate change conference, which runs until December 11, are
haggling over an ambitious roadmap for achieving the UN goal of limiting global
warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-industrial
levels.
The UN's
climate science panel says the emission of greenhouse gases from the burning of
fossil fuels such as coal has to drop 40-70 percent between 2010 and 2050, and
to zero by 2100.
As the
wrangling continues, the African penguins may be a living warning of the cost
of failure.




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