Dedication
We wish to dedicate this paper to two persons, one of whom initiated and then nurtured efforts to document the trends of the Cape Royds penguin colony, and the other who first collaborated on and then continued the effort, with both pondering the changes. For most of the time series upon which this paper is based they oversaw data acquisition, setting up so well an aerial census programme. Their successors in the endeavour were able to continue without interruption. We really owe so very much to the effort and foresight of these two ecologists and penguinologists!
Rowley H. Taylor, 18 October 1931–16 August 2021
Peter (Pete) R. Wilson, 6 February 1941–
Introduction
When populations change in size or distribution and we observe and conclude the reason and demographic mechanism involved, we have a better understanding of a species' ecology. This is a difficult task to accomplish for marine species that live in an environment to which humans make only brief visits (Ainley & Johns Reference Ainley and Johns2023). In modern times, as the human population increases beyond the oceans' capacity to sufficiently satisfy societal needs and the environment becomes more variable, it has become increasingly important to track marine biotic communities, particularly the portion that is exploited. That assessment is most fruitful when it is done within a historical context that can highlight the broader ecological significance of detected changes (Glantz & Thompson Reference Glantz and Thompson1981, Pauly & Tsukayama Reference Pauly and Tsukayama1987, Kittinger et al. Reference Kittinger, McClenachan, Gedan and Blight2015).
Due to the great expense involved in monitoring components of marine food webs, doing so for the economically valuable middle-trophic-level ‘forage’ species is generally quite problematic, as it rarely can be accomplished directly. Instead, monitoring is accomplished by using ‘indicator species’ that compete with humans for ‘prey’ (i.e. seabirds), such as in the Benguela (Crawford Reference Crawford2007, Crawford et al. Reference Crawford, Makhado, Whittington, Randall, Oosthuizen and Waller2015), Peru (Muck & Pauly Reference Muck, Pauly, Pauly and Tsukayama1987, Tovar et al. Reference Tovar, Guillen, Nakama, Pauly and Tsukayama1987) and California (Wells et al. Reference Wells, Santora, Henderson, Warzybok, Jahncke and Bradley2017, Warzybok et al. Reference Warzybok, Santora, Ainley, Bradley, Field and Capitolo2018) currents. If the indicators are to be truly useful, significant correlations between prey and predator variability are not sufficient. Additional contextual information has to be obtained to distinguish between climate effects on the relevant ocean biophysics vs fishery effects (and other factors) that affect indicator species' population change (e.g. Velarde et al. Reference Velarde, Ezcurra, Cisneros-Mata and Lavíın2004, Reference Velarde, Anderson and Ezcurra2019, Crawford et al. Reference Crawford, Makhado, Whittington, Randall, Oosthuizen and Waller2015, Wells et al. Reference Wells, Santora, Henderson, Warzybok, Jahncke and Bradley2017, Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Santora, Capitolo, Field, Beck and Carle2018b). That is, we have to know specifically, and quantitatively, what processes were indicated by the changes in an ‘indicator's’ population or demography.
Amassing the fine-scale biological information necessary to understand the ecology of indicator species in the Southern Ocean has been an unsurpassed challenge, quite unlike the measurement of the physical environment, which has been made possible by advances in satellite imagery. Despite no specific, quantified link having been established between predator and prey resources, be they affected by climate or fisheries, the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) has designated a meso-predator, the Adélie penguin Pygoscelis adeliae, as one of several indicator species of the health of the Antarctic marine prey-scape (Agnew Reference Agnew1997, Constable et al. Reference Constable, de la Mare, Agnew, Everson and Miller2000, CCAMLR 2018a, 2018b). For sure, a long history of monitoring population change in this penguin species has been achieved in many locations around Antarctica (e.g. Taylor et al. Reference Taylor, Wilson and Thomas1990, Schofield et al. Reference Schofield, Ducklow, Martinson, Meredith, Moline and Fraser2010, Lynch et al. Reference Lynch, Naveen, Trathan and Fagan2012, Lyver et al. Reference Lyver, Barron, Barton, Ainley, Pollard and Gordon2014, Southwell et al. Reference Southwell, Emmerson, McKinlay, Newbery, Takahashi and Kato2015, Emmerson & Southwell Reference Emmerson and Southwell2022), most recently using satellite imagery (Lynch & LaRue Reference Lynch and LaRue2014). However, determining any drivers of change in most cases remains related, with the least amount of speculation, to physical and specifically sea-ice change. Equivalent time series of the species' prey field for the most part have remained absent, thus lowering the explained variation. A recent analysis has found significant correlations between population change and climate/sea-ice factors, as well as a proxy for prey availability as affected by fishing at the capes Bird and Crozier, Ross Island colonies, 1997–2018 (D.G. Ainley et al. unpublished data). That is about as close as we have come to relating Adélie penguin population change to food web change, with other analyses being even more speculative (e.g. Trivelpiece et al. Reference Trivelpiece, Hinke, Miller, Reiss, Trivelpiece and Watters2011, Lynch et al. Reference Lynch, Naveen, Trathan and Fagan2012, Sailley et al. Reference Sailley, Ducklow, Moeller, Fraser, Schofield and Steinberg2013, Gorman Reference Gorman2015).
The longest biological time series in the Antarctic, exceeded in years only slightly by counts of emperor penguins Aptenodytes forsteri at Pointe-Géologie, Adélie Land (Barbraud & Weimerskirch Reference Barbraud and Weimerskirch2001), is that of Adélie penguin colony size at Cape Royds, Ross Island, 1955 to the present. Details of its changing trajectories for early segments of its history have been discussed (e.g. Blackburn et al. Reference Blackburn, Taylor and Wilson1990, Taylor & Wilson Reference Taylor and Wilson1990, Taylor et al. Reference Taylor, Wilson and Thomas1990, Wilson et al. Reference Wilson, Ainley, Nur, Jacobs, Barton and Ballard2001, Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Clarke, Arrigo, Fraser, Kato and Barton2005, Reference Ainley, Ballard, Ackley, Blight, Eastman and Emslie2007, Lyver et al. Reference Lyver, Barron, Barton, Ainley, Pollard and Gordon2014), but not overall, nor recently. Tying together the various portions of the story is the goal of the present paper. Although measurement of physical aspects of this population's local and larger-scale environment have become more available, there is no accompanying time series of prey availability, other than perhaps by proxy (D.G. Ainley et al. unpublished data). Nevertheless, it would be instructive to consider the patterns of change during the several decades in which this colony has been monitored, with the identification of factors behind some of the earlier trends now being possible through retrospective application of current, better-quantified biophysical patterns through advanced satellite detection (e.g. Arrigo et al. Reference Arrigo, Van Dijken and Strong2015).
The importance of physical aspects, mainly open water and the extent of sea ice, is well known in general for Adélie penguins (summarized in Ainley Reference Ainley2002). For the southernmost of all penguin colonies this relationship to sea ice (or its lack) is evident from a well-documented geological timescale perspective (Stonehouse Reference Stonehouse1967, Reference Stonehouse1970, Spellerberg Reference Spellerberg1970, Emslie et al. Reference Emslie, Berkman, Ainley, Coats and Polito2003, Reference Emslie, Coats and Licht2007). In modern times, other factors also have come to bear, including tourism and the competitive release through exploitation of competing whales, seals and fish. The effect of some of these factors is described in greater detail as part of this review and synthesis. The ability to quantify the demographic response to a once-in-a-millennium ‘natural experiment’ brought about by the presence of mega-icebergs B15A and C16 (Arrigo et al. Reference Arrigo, van Dijken, Ainley, Fahnestock and Markus2002) that hindered access to Ross Island breeding colonies for 5 years (2001–2005; Dugger et al. Reference Dugger, Ballard, Ainley, Lyver and Schine2014) greatly enhanced our understanding of the effects of sea-ice cover on penguin productivity. On the other hand, although the Royds colony is now supposedly safe from fishery exploitation due to the waters surrounding Ross Island becoming part of a marine protected area as of 2017 (MPA; CCAMLR 2016), fishing still occurs nearby (for purposes of monitoring stocks; Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Ballard, Eastman, Evans, Nur and Parkinson2016, Parker et al. Reference Parker, Mormede, Devries, Hanchet and Eisert2016). Intensive fishing continues in the waters bordering the MPA, which include the region occupied by penguins from Ross Island colonies during the non-breeding season (Ballard et al. Reference Ballard, Toniolo, Ainley, Parkinson, Arrigo and Trathan2010, Jongsomjit et al. Reference Jongsomjit, Lescroël, Schmidt, Lisovski, Ainley and Hines2024). Before the late 1990s, fish extraction had been absent from the Ross Sea region (Ainley Reference Ainley2010).
Methods
Layout of the paper and hypotheses/variables considered
Necessarily, because multiple factors have affected Royds' penguin population trends over a 66 year period, this review will be covering multiple subjects, leading to a substantial list of references. Annual population size (breeding pairs) of Adélie penguins at Cape Royds (Figs 1 & 2) is derived from counts made directly in early years and those from aerial photos in later years conducted and acquired by the New Zealand Adélie penguin programme (e.g. Lyver et al. Reference Lyver, Barron, Barton, Ainley, Pollard and Gordon2014). Counts were made on 1 December or thereabouts, as by then all early failed and non-breeders have departed, with just one adult incubating eggs and the other being at sea (Ainley Reference Ainley2002).
The first portion of this paper contains a review of the literature, separating the Royds history into segments. Included later in the paper will be the use of publications/analyses to provide some ecological and statistical explanations of population change that apply to these earlier periods.
The second portion of the paper contains analyses of the trends during the most recent two decades, since 1998, as affected by a set of environmental variables that were not available for interpreting trends in earlier decades. Most of these variables have been derived from satellite imagery that was not available until the late 1990s. The result of these statistical analyses, using annual Royds population change as the dependent variable, help to confirm or inform interpretations of earlier trends. We looked at the following hypotheses and related variables for the period 1998–2018, sometimes with lags; some of the time series exceeded the length of that used in the modelling:
1) Ross Gyre speed (km/day) in July–October (data available 1992–2018) - stronger sea-ice movement (Kwok et al. Reference Kwok, Pang and Kacimi2017) probably impedes penguin arrival at Royds, thus precluding eventual nesting (Ainley Reference Ainley2002);
2) Wind (m/s) measured at McMurdo Station, October–February - affects ice formation and in turn the duration of open water adjacent to Royds (McMurdo Sound polynya), which affects penguin movement (see Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Clarke, Arrigo, Fraser, Kato and Barton2005, Kim et al. Reference Kim, Saenz, Scanniello, Daly and Ainley2018);
3) Open water area (km2) in November - the area of open water in McMurdo Sound polynya at the time when penguins are arriving to nest (Arrigo et al. Reference Arrigo, Van Dijken and Strong2015); appreciable open water positively affects colony growth and productivity (Ainley Reference Ainley2002);
4) Open water date - day of year when the polynya reaches half its eventual size (see point 3); open water appearing early enough in November to affect penguin arrival (Ainley Reference Ainley2002, Dugger et al. Reference Dugger, Ainley, Lyver, Barton and Ballard2010, Reference Dugger, Ballard, Ainley, Lyver and Schine2014);
5) Mean air temperature (°C), November, measured at McMurdo Station - its relationship to penguins is not often obvious but the variable is used in many studies (e.g. Taylor & Wilson Reference Taylor and Wilson1990);
6) Sea surface temperature (°C) is another variable often used, although it is a complex variable being affected by wind (mixing of surface with deep waters) and air temperature, as well as the amount and proximity of sea ice; its relationship to penguins or their prey is not obvious in this system;
7) Large-scale sea-ice extent (or area; SIE) in the Ross Sea sector of the Southern Ocean (km2; Parkinson Reference Parkinson2002, Reference Parkinson2019) in the month it reaches its annual maximum, 1979–2019 - in the past, population change has exhibited a negative relationship with a 4–5 year lag and would have to do with recruitment and characteristics of the wintering area (Wilson et al. Reference Wilson, Ainley, Nur, Jacobs, Barton and Ballard2001);
8) Weddell seal Leptonychotes weddellii population size in adjacent Erebus Bay (Fig. 1) - count of pups born in October (Fig. 2); index of potential level of trophic competition for Antarctic silverfish Pleuragramma antarcticum, thus affecting intra- and interspecific competition (Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, LaRue, Stirling, Stammerjohn and Siniff2015a, D.G. Ainley et al. unpublished data);
9) Catch in CCAMLR Area 88.1 of Antarctic toothfish Dissostichus mawsoni ≥ 134 cm total length (TL), totalled during the 3 years previous (tonnes) – owing to very conservative life history (e.g. maturity at 17 years and 134 cm TL), large fish taken in the commercial fishery are not readily replaced and thus the release of Antarctic silverfish, of about the size taken by penguins (Eastman Reference Eastman1985), to competing predators is cumulative (Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Crockett, Eastman, Fraser, Nur and O'Brien2017, D.G. Ainley et al. unpublished data). These large toothfish, having attained neutral buoyancy, occur high in the water column where penguins forage (D.G. Ainley et al. unpublished data). More silverfish would lead to growth in the penguin population.
Although we considered them, we did not include primary production or chlorophyll concentration because they were shown to be unimportant to Ross Sea Adélie penguins (Dugger et al. Reference Dugger, Ballard, Ainley, Lyver and Schine2014, Morandini et al. Reference Morandini, Salas, Nur and Ainley2022).
Source of environmental variables
Spring to summer averages of wind speed and air temperature were measured at McMurdo Station, which is at the southern edge of the study area (Fig. 1), and they are derived from daily data provided by the University of Wisconsin (http://amrc.ssec.wisc.edu/usap/mcmurdo/). Annual averages of the amount of open water in the McMurdo Sound polynya and sea-surface temperature (optimum interpolation SST) were derived from the Sea-viewing Wide-Field-of-View Sensor (SeaWiFS) and the Aqua satellite's Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) using techniques described in Arrigo et al. (Reference Arrigo, Van Dijken and Strong2015). The early part of that time series has been published (see also https://nsidc.org/data/g02202 and https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oisst; Reynolds et al. Reference Reynolds, Smith, Liu, Chelton, Casey and Schlax2007, Meier et al. Reference Meier, Fetterer, Savoie, Mallory, Duerr and Stroeve2017). Annual average daily SIE in the Ross Sea sector of the Southern Ocean (130° W to 160° E) during the month of maximum were derived from passive microwave data from the Scanning Multichannel Microwave Radiometer (SMMR), Special Sensor Microwave Imager (SSMI) and SSMI Sounder (SSMIS) instruments on a series of NASA and Department of Defense satellites (described in Parkinson Reference Parkinson2019).
Weddell seal pup counts are a ratio relative to the count in 1967 (Fig. 2; data from J. Rotella; see also Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, LaRue, Stirling, Stammerjohn and Siniff2015a, D.G. Ainley et al. unpublished data). Toothfish catch data are from reconstructions of the length-frequency in the catch, using Figi-analysis software, published by CCAMLR (2008, 2019) for Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)/CCAMLR Fishery Area 88.1 (summary of subareas S70, N70 and SRZ; D.G. Ainley et al. unpublished data).
Statistical methods
We used a Bayesian ensemble algorithm, the function BEAST from the package Rbeast (Li et al. Reference Li, Hu, Zhang, Zhao, Dongarra and Moler2023), to confirm the different periods of population change for change-point detection. For a given time series, BEAST outputs a model capturing the seasonality of the data, the long-term trend and the probability and location of break-points in the trend, combining several models into an average model (Bayesian model average).
The text provided in the Supplemental Materials describes the details of autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) modelling (Box et al. Reference Box, Jenkins, Reinsel and Ljung2015) and is adapted from D.G. Ainley et al. (unpublished data), in which an attempt was made to explain the recent increase in the populations of Adélie penguins at Cape Crozier and Cape Bird and that of Weddell Seals in Erebus Bay, McMurdo Sound (Fig. 1). Cape Royds was not included because it has been subjected to several factors, such as tourism and intensive predation by south polar skuas Stercorarius maccormicki that do not affect these other colonies. Moreover, of these Ross Island penguin colonies, only Royds is adjacent to a large breeding assemblage of Weddell seals that do affect the availability of silverfish to the penguins (Saenz et al. Reference Saenz, Ainley, Daly, Ballard, Conlisk and Elrod2020). The present paper is complementary to D.G. Ainley et al. (unpublished data) and uses the same statistical procedure.
To establish the ARIMA modelling for the period 1998–2018, we calculated the year-to-year (annual) change for the Cape Royds Adélie penguin colony (breeding pairs, using the data shown in Fig. 2). We used the natural log of the ratio Nt/Nt - 1 as our growth metric (Nt = number at a given time). There are several advantages to using this metric. Lack of year-to-year growth (i.e. Nt = Nt - 1) results in a 0 value (log(1) = 0). In addition, the log of the ratio of counts is relatively insensitive to substantial error in the estimation of the counts. The time series begins (1998) with the availability of data owing to new satellites (see above), and it ends (2018) when the person at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory who had been calculating Ross Gyre speed, Ron Kwok, retired.
Model set construction and model selection
Models for the Royds colony size were fitted using the ARIMA function of the forecast package in R (http://www.r-project.org/); see Supplemental Materials for a full description. We built one model set relating change in population size (i.e. ln(Nt/Nt - 1)) to environmental (atmospheric and ocean) and fishing variables (Table I). Annual growth values for 1998/1999–2000/2001 were excluded from the analysed dataset in order to allow at least a 3 year lag for all the variables and 3 years of cumulative data for the total catch of toothfish ≥ 134 cm TL.
SIE = sea-ice extent; SPD = speed.
Per our hypotheses above, to consider age of recruitment of the penguins at Royds (1 year older than at the other Ross Island colonies; Kappes et al. Reference Kappes, Dugger, Lescroël, Ainley, Ballard and Barton2021), temporal lags in effects were explored for toothfish removal, SIE, gyre speed and open water area. A first model was built including all of the ocean and atmosphere variables (saturated model) for which we had previous consistent hypotheses. Because the geophysical variables are to varying degrees correlated with one another, we inspected and included only the set of variables whose degree of collinearity did not result in a variance inflation factor (VIF) > 10 (Kutner et al. Reference Kutner, Nachtsheim, Neter and Li2004). Thus, all variables included had VIF < 10, with a maximum VIF of 4.43. We then used an information-theoretic approach (Burnham & Anderson Reference Burnham and Anderson2002) with Akaike information criterion (AIC), inspection of effect sizes and likelihood ratio (LR) tests conducted by removing one variable at a time to determine the best model(s).
Fishing variables were selected from different combinations of the total tonnage of toothfish ≥ 134 cm TL caught (i.e. 3 years of cumulative data, 2 years of cumulative data, 1 year of data and including different percentage weights of the cumulative data per year; see Table I & Supplemental Table 1). The best combination was selected and included in the saturated model. We started from models including all main effects and proceeded iteratively backwards, deleting non-significant terms and checking for improvement in the AIC values. The non-significance of the removed terms was further confirmed by adding them back in one by one to the final model. During the selection process, when addressing our hypotheses (see above), 4 and 5 year lags and quadratic effects were included to check for significance and for improvement in the model score. Next, we compared results to a model with only the autocorrelation or intercept as a null model. We selected the model having the lowest AIC value to be our best model. Finally, the different combinations of fishing variables were tested by including them individually in our best model to check for any improvement to its AIC value. However, when evaluating competitive models, we examined the maximized log-likelihood by fitting the reduced (by one variable at a time) model to ensure that small ΔAIC values were not solely a result of adding an additional, uninformative covariate to a preferred, more parsimonious model (Arnold 2010). In our final selected models, all variables included, with one exception, were significant at or near P = 0.05, as determined by the LR test, a statistical test preferred to the Wald test, especially with small sample sizes (Hosmer et al. Reference Hosmer, Lemeshow and Sturdivant2013).
All analysis code and data, including Jupyter Notebooks showing all the above work, are available at https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.10602315.
Results and discussion
Results from the change-point analysis indicated a 31.7% probability that the trend component has five change-point (Pr(tcp = 5) = 0.32). Inflection points in trends occurred in (year (probability)): 1959 (0.51), 1982 (0.60), 1987 (0.92), 2000 (0.99) and 2011(0.38; Fig. 3). Thus, there is some element of approximation of the various dates. However, the 1959 point appears to have been thrown off by an usually low population that year, when it seems that c. 1965 is the actual overall low of the colony before it started to increase. The same is true for the 1982 point, which actually should be several years earlier (i.e. c. 1975).
Early years: International Geophysical Year to the mid-1970s
Following the heroic expeditions led by Robert Scott and Ernest Shackleton during the early twentieth century, the Cape Royds colony was free of human influence until preparations were initiated for participation in the International Geophysical Year (IGY; 1957–1958). In 1955, New Zealand began establishment of Scott Base and the USA began establishment of nearby McMurdo Station close to where the heroic expeditions based their operations (tip of Erebus Peninsula; Fig. 1). James Murray, a biologist of the first Shackleton expedition, resided at Cape Royds (with the entire crew) during 1907–1909 and made some of the first informed observations of nesting Adélie penguins (Murray Reference Murray and Shackleton1909). The colony in those early years appears to have been ~60% of its size when next censused in 1956 (~2000 pairs). The early estimate was based on the number of eggs taken by the Shackleton over-wintering party, who apparently took them all (!) (Taylor Reference Taylor1962). What variation occurred during the intervening years, of course, is not known.
A few projects began the collection of data (e.g. Cape Royds penguin counts) prior to the IGY. The decrease in Royds colony size from 1955 to early 1960s (1965) was mainly the result of frequent, unchaperoned visitation by persons from Scott Base and McMurdo Station, arriving by over-ice vehicle or helicopter (Stonehouse Reference Stonehouse1967). The decrease was caused by disturbance that dissuaded pre-breeders from recruiting, although a decrease in chick production was also involved (Blackburn et al. Reference Blackburn, Taylor and Wilson1991). As a result of the alarming decrease, tourist visitation became strictly controlled, beginning with designation in 1972 of the colony and surrounding area as Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) No. 1, eventually becoming Antarctic Specially Protected Area No. 121. Once visitation was limited, the colony began to slowly increase, although the increase rate was not as fast as it could have been (as judged from modelling). However, the lack of fast recovery from tourism was in accord with an actual overall decrease in the Ross Island meta-population during the 1960s–1970s owing to severe sea-ice conditions in the Ross Sea (Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, LeResche and Sladen1983, Taylor et al. Reference Taylor, Wilson and Thomas1990).
Whaling era: mid-1970s to 1990
In c. 1975, the Royds colony began to exhibit a steep increase through the late 1980s (Fig. 2). Attempting to explain this trend, Blackburn et al. (Reference Blackburn, Taylor and Wilson1991) experimented with various demographic parameters, with results leading them to conclude that an increase in chick production (and, hence, post-fledging availability of juveniles) and a decrease in mortality of subadults and adults were required. Blackburn et al. (Reference Blackburn, Taylor and Wilson1991) grappled with deriving an explanation for the apparent improved conditions for Royds, as well as other Ross Sea Adélie penguin colonies (Taylor & Wilson Reference Taylor and Wilson1990, Taylor et al. Reference Taylor, Wilson and Thomas1990). They thought it could be related to climate change (exemplified by increasing air temperatures measured at Scott Base) and discounted that it could be due to competitive release of forage by the demise of baleen whales in the Southern Ocean. They arrived at that conclusion because whaling had removed large baleen whales from the Ross Sea region before the 1940s, at least for the ‘great whales’ (see Ainley Reference Ainley2010).
Unknown to Blackburn et al. (Reference Blackburn, Taylor and Wilson1991) was that, once all of the large whales were gone, industry had turned to taking the smaller Antarctic minke whales Balaenoptera bonaerensis beginning c. 1970, with the take intensifying during the 1980s. More than 116 000 minke whales were taken, including an incredibly large number (> 20 000) just from International Whaling Commission (IWC) Areas V and VI during that time (Fig. 2; Brown & Brownell Reference Brown and Brownell2001). That area (i.e. the continental slope and adjacent waters of Victoria Land (western Ross Sea region) and eastern Adélie Land) subsequently was determined to be where Royds penguins spent their non-breeding period, or at least they did so into the early 2000s (Ballard et al. Reference Ballard, Toniolo, Ainley, Parkinson, Arrigo and Trathan2010). By the later 2000s, a portion of Royds penguins continued to do so (Jongsomjit et al. Reference Jongsomjit, Lescroël, Schmidt, Lisovski, Ainley and Hines2024). In further support of the connection, it has been shown that minke whales and Adélie penguins compete directly for food, with the whales' exploitation directly affecting the penguins' foraging behaviour and diet (Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Ballard and Dugger2006, Reference Ainley, Ballard, Jones, Jongsomjit, Pierce and Smith2015b). Therefore, the close temporal overlap of the Royds population increase with the removal of large numbers of minke whales in an area important to the penguins raises the likelihood that the two factors were connected (Ballance et al. Reference Ballance, Pitman, Hewitt, Siniff, Trivelpiece, Clapham, Estes, Demaster, Doak, Williams and Brownell2006, Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Ballard, Ackley, Blight, Eastman and Emslie2007).
The commercial take of minke whales in the Ross Sea region, and elsewhere, ended with the whaling moratorium enacted by the IWC in 1982, except for a much smaller scientific take that occurred for a few additional seasons. The cessation of this whaling led to rapid recovery of the regional minke whale population by the early 2000s (Branch Reference Branch2006). Hypothetically, this rapid recovery would explain why the penguin population ceased its increase when it did. However, why did the penguin population, if artificially raised by the loss of a competitor, not then decrease to its former level as the competitor returned, as surmised for the penguin population response to whaling in the Scotia Sea region (Ballance et al. Reference Ballance, Pitman, Hewitt, Siniff, Trivelpiece, Clapham, Estes, Demaster, Doak, Williams and Brownell2006)?
Climate change becomes important: the 1990s
Essentially, the historical exploitation of the Ross Sea region biotic resources ended with the whaling moratorium enacted by the IWC in 1982, as well as with the Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Seals enacted in 1978. The latter, in part, was instituted in response to the take of Weddell seals to feed sled dogs in the McMurdo Sound region beginning with the IGY (Ainley Reference Ainley2010, Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, LaRue, Stirling, Stammerjohn and Siniff2015a). Although possibly just a coincidence, the rapid increase in the Royds penguin population described above occurred when the seal breeding and moulting populations of McMurdo Sound were at their lowest level (Fig. 2; Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, LaRue, Stirling, Stammerjohn and Siniff2015a). It has been shown recently that within the Ross Sea region Adélie penguin colonies are smallest where Weddell seal numbers are highest (LaRue et al. Reference LaRue, Salas, Nur, Ainley, Stammerjohn and Barrington2019). However, remaining to be shown is why the seals would affect the penguins in this way given that the penguins forage for the more energetically valuable Antarctic silverfish mostly after the seals depart the Royds foraging area (chased away by seasonal arrival of killer whales Orcinus orca; Saenz et al. Reference Saenz, Ainley, Daly, Ballard, Conlisk and Elrod2020). The departure of the seals is positive, as feeding fish to chicks is beneficial for their growth and subsequent survival (Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Dugger, La Mesa, Ballard, Barton and Jennings2018a, Jennings et al. Reference Jennings, Dugger, Ballard and Ainley2021, Reference Jennings, Dugger, Ballard and Ainley2023).
Nevertheless, by c. 1988 the Royds colony reached ~4200 pairs, nearly double the level from any earlier point in the historical record, at least considering the years when censuses were made beginning in 1909. In addition, the colony had expanded to include Cape Barne ~2.8 km away across Backdoor Bay (Taylor & Wilson Reference Taylor and Wilson1990). That portion of the Royds-Barne colony attained a few dozen nests and continued into the early 2000s, although Adélie penguins had nested there as well during prehistoric times. Carbon dating of penguin parts and eggshells dug from the ornithogenic substrate indicated occupation 275–375 and 540–880 years earlier (Spellerberg Reference Spellerberg1970, Stonehouse Reference Stonehouse1970, Emslie et al. Reference Emslie, Coats and Licht2007), as well as 1170–790 years before present, when as many as 3000–4000 pairs nested at Cape Barne (Emslie et al. Reference Emslie, Berkman, Ainley, Coats and Polito2003). How many nested at Cape Royds then has not been estimated. At least by the mid-1990s small clusters of nests also occurred elsewhere on the Royds peninsula (D.G. Ainley, personal observation 1996–2000), a phenomenon also exhibited in prehistoric times (Spellerberg Reference Spellerberg1970, Emslie et al. Reference Emslie, Coats and Licht2007). Why the Royds colony (and other Ross Sea colonies) did not decrease with the recovery of the minke whale population is probably related to the significant change underway in the Ross Sea climate, especially related to wind and sea ice.
Climate change became a major player in the Ross Sea region, with the regime shift exhibited in the Southern Annular Mode (SAM), also known as the Antarctic Dipole (Yuan & Martinson Reference Yuan and Martinson2001), turning positive in the late 1980s (Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Clarke, Arrigo, Fraser, Kato and Barton2005). The SAM is measured by an index calculated as the difference in atmospheric pressure between Australia (40S) and the Amundsen Sea (65S), and until c. 1989 the shift had vacillated between negative and positive modes (relative to the long-term average) on a decadal scale. The more permanent shift to positive SAM (+SAM) in recent years was a result of atmospheric pressure effects brought about by the Antarctic ozone hole and mid-latitude warming (Thompson & Solomon Reference Thompson and Solomon2002, Turner et al. Reference Turner, Comiso, Marshall, Lachlan-Cope, Bracegirdle and Maksym2009).
The significant feature of +SAM relevant to Royds penguins was the increase in winds (Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Clarke, Arrigo, Fraser, Kato and Barton2005, a study that also considered air temperature change and other variables), which led to greater large-scale SIE (Fig. 4). More importantly for penguins, increased wind led to the greater size and persistence of coastal, latent-heat polynyas (Fig. 4; Parkinson Reference Parkinson2002, Stammerjohn et al. Reference Stammerjohn, Martinson, Smith, Yuan and Rind2008). Wind and temperature, both extending across the penguin count time series, best explained colony trends. More specifically, because of the changed wind regime, the McMurdo Sound polynya opened more often and earlier in the spring, corresponding to the timing when penguins are returning to the colony to nest (Arrigo et al. Reference Arrigo, Van Dijken and Strong2015, Kim et al. Reference Kim, Saenz, Scanniello, Daly and Ainley2018). As confirmed by the B15A mega-iceberg ‘natural experiment’ in 2001–2005 (Dugger et al. Reference Dugger, Ainley, Lyver, Barton and Ballard2010, Reference Dugger, Ballard, Ainley, Lyver and Schine2014), open water near the colony leads to higher rates of recruitment and higher nesting success, hence increased colony productivity and population growth (akin to the variables that Blackburn et al. 1990 attributed to growth in earlier decades). These more frequent positive conditions seemingly allowed the Royds penguin population to overcome any negative effects brought about by the recovery of the regional whale population (as well as enhanced Ross Sea Gyre; see below). Thus, the colony size attained by the late 1980s continued through the 1990s rather than decreasing (Fig. 2). The retrospective analysis of ocean-ice variables below supports this supposition.
Mega-iceberg era: start of the twenty-first century
The arrival of the twenty-first century brought about a truly educational event, a ‘natural experiment' - Royds colony penguin response to 4 years of extensive sea-ice cover brought about by two mega-icebergs, C16 and especially B15A (~175 km long), lodged against the north shore of Ross Island in 2001. During 3 of the 4 years, icebergs prevented the winds from clearing McMurdo Sound of sea ice (i.e. prevention of the McMurdo Sound polynya that otherwise would have formed each year). In one year (2003), exceedingly strong winds overcame the iceberg effect, and the polynya was present regardless of the icebergs. Breeding failure ensued in those years of total early breeding-season sea-ice cover, leading many penguins to move to Cape Bird or to recruit elsewhere that had open water (Dugger et al. Reference Dugger, Ainley, Lyver, Barton and Ballard2010, Reference Dugger, Ballard, Ainley, Lyver and Schine2014). The colony population dropped by more than half of what its level was in the year 2000, decreasing to just ~1500 pairs (Fig. 2). When the icebergs disappeared, the Royds colony began to recover at a rate similar to that shown in the 1980s when it became free from trophic competition with minke whales (Fig. 2).
The more complex environment of recent decades
The importance of ice cover and other bio-physical factors that could be affecting the Royds colony population trend is apparent in our multivariate analysis from 2006 (thus B15A years not included) to 2019. Two competitive models relating annual growth included gyre speed (speed of the Ross Gyre, July–October; Fig.4) with a 5 year lag and open water (i.e. size of McMurdo Sound polynya in November of the current year; Table I & Supplemental Table 1). The first competitive model included gyre speed with a 5 year lag, open water, air temperature with a 5 year lag, SIE with a 4 year lag and 2 years of cumulative fish (weights 20%, 100%; see Supplemental Table 1). Gyre speed with a 5 year lag was negative ($\hat{\beta }_{gyreSPD}$ = -0.1285, standard error (SE) = 0.0336). Conversely, air temperature with a 5 year lag, SIE with a 4 year lag and open water showed positive associations: when temperature or SIE decreased or open water was later in the season, the annual growth of the Cape Royds colony decreased ($\hat{\beta }_{airtemp}$ = 0.2148, SE = 0.0654; $\hat{\beta }_{OWdate}$ = 2.2077, SE = 0.4761; $\hat{\beta }_{SeaIceExt}$ = 0.2887, SE = 0.1222). When cumulative fish increased (more large, older fish removed from the food web), the Royds Adélie penguin colony size increased ($\hat{\beta }_{fish}$ = 0.0259, SE = 0.0099).
These results confirm an earlier analysis identifying wind speed as an important explanatory variable in population trends (Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Clarke, Arrigo, Fraser, Kato and Barton2005). An adjusted R 2 of 0.526 of the model, although respectable, on the other hand indicates that other factors had to have been involved in driving the partial population recovery post-iceberg years. Skua predation and competition with seals for food do vary annually and so do not lend themselves as covariates on par with those of annual penguin population change nor the other climate variables used. However, they are ecological variables worth exploring further.
Lower chick production due to predation from skuas probably is involved only in the partial recovery (from B15A) of the Royds penguin colony, setting it apart from the other Ross Island colonies. During 2002–2017 (i.e. post-B15A), chicks per pair at Royds averaged just 0.83 ± 0.03 compared to 1.04 ± 0.02 at Crozier (Schmidt et al. Reference Schmidt, Ballard, Lescroël, Dugger, Jongsomjit and Elrod2021). This appears to be due to a greater level of predation of eggs and small chicks by south polar skuas, in accord with a ratio of skua pairs to breeding penguin pairs determined during 2011–2012 at Royds of 1:77 compared to 1:136 at Bird and 1:168 at Crozier (Wilson et al. Reference Wilson, Lyver, Greene, Whitehead, Dugger and Karl2016). That would be double the predation pressure at Royds compared to the other colonies. In 1985–1986, 15 years before the B15A iceberg, chick production was 1.1–1.2 chicks per breeding pair at Royds (Blackburn et al. 1990). The disproportionate relative representation of skuas at Royds, although increased post-B15A (owing to penguin population decrease), has been the case over the years due to proximity to McMurdo Station and its open dump just 20 km from Royds. The dump was regularly frequented by many skuas (Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Morrell and Wood1986). In 1981, 76 skua pairs were at Royds (Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Morrell and Wood1986), but with closing of the dump in the later 1980s, numbers fell to 29 pairs by 2002 (Wilson et al. Reference Wilson, Lyver, Greene, Whitehead, Dugger and Karl2016).
During the mega-iceberg experiment especially, the desertion of nests due to low penguin mate synchrony allowed skuas to intrude farther into sub-colonies than normal at Royds. As a result, more nests became located on sub-colony perimeters, in turn becoming ‘easy pickings’ for the skuas (Young Reference Young1994, Emslie et al. Reference Emslie, Karnovsky and Trivelpiece1995). Several sub-colonies were reduced in size (five actually were completely obliterated (adult penguin desertion after nest contents stolen)). Owing to the high sub-colony perimeter-to-area ratio at Royds - relatively more edges for skuas to exploit (Schmidt et al. Reference Schmidt, Ballard, Lescroël, Dugger, Jongsomjit and Elrod2021) - skua predation has remained especially important, thus reducing total colony productivity. The resulting smaller Royds colony size does lead to less intraspecific trophic competition and larger chicks, hence greater post-fledging survival (Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Dugger, La Mesa, Ballard, Barton and Jennings2018a), but this is not enough to compensate for lower chick production.
Additional factors that could be involved in the Royds population trend are the recovery of the Erebus Bay Weddell seal population, matching levels in the 1960s, and a fishery for large Antarctic toothfish being inaugurated in the waters surrounding Ross Island and elsewhere in the Ross Sea in 1997 (Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Crockett, Eastman, Fraser, Nur and O'Brien2017). The seal recovery as well as growth of the adjacent Ross Island penguin colonies through to the present day appear to have been facilitated by the extraction of a competitor for silverfish (i.e. the toothfish), thus hypothetically leading to greater availability of energy-dense silverfish to penguins and seals. The seal colony adjacent to Royds and other Ross Island penguin colonies benefitted (Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, Crockett, Eastman, Fraser, Nur and O'Brien2017, D.G. Ainley et al. unpublished data). All of these mesopredators - penguins, seals and toothfish - acquire forage fish (silverfish) high in the water column (Fuiman et al. Reference Fuiman, Davis and Williams2002, Ballard et al. Reference Ballard, Jongsomjit, Veloz and Ainley2012, Ainley et al. Reference Saenz, Ainley, Daly, Ballard, Conlisk and Elrod2021, Saenz et al. Reference Saenz, Ainley, Daly, Ballard, Conlisk and Elrod2020). However, although the presence of fewer large toothfish may have increased the prevalence of silverfish in the upper water column, the growth of competing seal numbers and their foraging may have countered this factor.
Integration towards understanding Royds trends
More reliable presence of the polynyas (with stronger winds) typically corresponds to breeding productivity increases because penguins are more efficient at swimming in open water vs walking across sea ice. Easier access to the open water leads to a greater proportion of adults attempting to breed as well as higher pair nest-change synchrony and higher breeding success (Ainley Reference Ainley2002). During the period 1998–2018, when winds were 1 standard deviation (SD) above the mean (9.1 ± 0.9 m/s), McMurdo Sound polynya size averaged 5070 ± 291 km2 compared to 2930 ± 885 km2 when winds were < 1 SD below the mean - for the entire series, r 2 = 0.6579, not including the 2002–2005 iceberg years (P < 0.05). Another way to look at this is seen in the decrease in McMurdo Sound fast-ice extent (more open water) by 2 km/year during 2002–2014, a wind-driven phenomenon (Kim et al. Reference Kim, Saenz, Scanniello, Daly and Ainley2018). The size and seasonal persistence of the polynya have been increasing or becoming of adequate size at a greater annual frequency with the greater winds brought by the SAM regime shift in the later 1980s (Arrigo et al. Reference Arrigo, Van Dijken and Strong2015). The seasonal timing of McMurdo Sound polynya formation has not changed to the degree that it affects population variation, unlike Ross Island colonies on the northern coast affected by the Ross Sea polynya (D.G. Ainley et al. unpublished data).
As noted above, this environmental change, which made it easier for Royds penguins to forage, overcame the increased trophic competition by minke whales as the whale population recovered. What this finding also accomplishes is that it makes more sense of covarying wind-driven variation in regional-scale SIE and its supposed effect on penguin colony size change (Wilson et al. Reference Wilson, Ainley, Nur, Jacobs, Barton and Ballard2001). It was found in that study that a greater SIE led to colony decrease 4–5 years later. Now that we have a more complete array of variables, it appears that it is the production (and subsequent recruitment 4–5 years later) of a larger number of young rather than some effect on juvenile survival due to greater SIE that brings about the lagged colony increase, as had been hypothesized by Wilson et al. (Reference Wilson, Ainley, Nur, Jacobs, Barton and Ballard2001).
Simultaneously, and counter to the polynya facilitation, the increasing winds have led to a higher rate of ice movement in the Ross Gyre, where Royds birds spend the winter (Ballard et al. Reference Ballard, Toniolo, Ainley, Parkinson, Arrigo and Trathan2010, Jongsomjit et al. Reference Jongsomjit, Lescroël, Schmidt, Lisovski, Ainley and Hines2024). During years of greater gyre speed, SIE also is greater (Comiso et al. Reference Comiso, Kwok, Martin and Gordon2011, Holland & Kwok Reference Holland and Kwok2012). During 1992–2017 (gyre speed available), in years when gyre speed (mean 6.3 ± 0.9 km/day) is 1 SD above the mean, the Royds colony is smaller (mean size = 2326 ± 510 pairs) than the previous year; when gyre speed is 1 SD below the mean, colony size is greater (2742 ± 652 pairs). Thus, it appears that northward sea-ice movement, especially that along the Victoria Land coast in the spring, affects the opposite, southward movement of the penguins and thus the number able to show up in time to breed in a given year (and be included in the c. 1 December census). Ultimately, the overall production of chicks that year, and subsequently to recruit, is affected, consistent with the findings of the earlier Blackburn et al. (Reference Blackburn, Taylor and Wilson1991) demographic reconstruction (see also Dugger et al. Reference Dugger, Ballard, Ainley, Lyver and Schine2014). Their movement along the Victoria Land coast from non-breeding/wintering areas to Royds (Ballard et al. Reference Ballard, Toniolo, Ainley, Parkinson, Arrigo and Trathan2010) against the direction of ice flow would slow the penguins' travel.
Younger birds make up the majority of new recruits and are later to arrive regardless (Ainley et al. Reference Ainley, LeResche and Sladen1983), and so further retardation results in them not showing up in time to breed. However, there is also a 5 year lag, which is consistent with the age of first breeding at Royds, which is 1 year older compared to in other Ross Island colonies (Kappes et al. Reference Kappes, Dugger, Lescroël, Ainley, Ballard and Barton2021). It is the productivity 4–5 years earlier that is affected by number of recruits showing up (with large-scale SIE also correlating in a lagged fashion but being an artefact of gyre speed). Therefore, the increased gyre speed (and SIE) of recent decades (Kwok et al. Reference Kwok, Pang and Kacimi2017) appears to have been another of the factors that has had a negative influence on Royds colony recovery.
Conclusions
A number of factors have led to variation in the Cape Royds Adélie penguin colony size from 1955 to the present. Included are protection from unchaperoned tourism, decreasing and then recovering populations of cetacean trophic competitors, an inordinate level of south polar skua predation on penguin eggs and chicks thus decreasing production, more reliable presence of open water thus encouraging higher breeding propensity and success and increasing speed of ice movement in the Ross Sea region wintering habitat (lowering annual recruitment rate). The whale and climate factors have been important in affecting Adélie penguin population dynamics in other, larger Ross Sea colonies. What has proved not to be as important is competition for silverfish by an increasing (recovering) Weddell seal population, nor increasing silverfish availability due to reduced competition for silverfish from Antarctic toothfish. The latter two factors appear to cancel each other out, making the effect of silverfish availability much less important than for the two larger Adélie penguin colonies on Ross Island, which have few competing seals.
The most recent overall result has been a lack of population recovery from the extreme effects of too much local sea-ice cover brought about by the two mega-icebergs during 2001–2005, a pattern that is not consistent with the recovery (and further growth) of the other Ross Island colonies. Thus, the trends of the single Royds colony have been interesting and greatly instructive regarding Adélie penguin ecology, but for the purposes of monitoring larger-scale ecosystem/food web change a regional perspective clearly is required. The entire cluster of Ross Island colonies needs to be considered. The other lesson is that more than climate change (the subject of many recent Antarctic penguin analyses) can affect trends in Antarctic penguin colony growth.
Supplementary material
To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/S0954102024000051.
Acknowledgements
The development of this paper required no direct fieldwork and thus no permits were necessary under either the Antarctic Treaty or the Antarctic Conservation Act (USA). Useful comments to improve the paper were received from P. Abrams, L. Blight, K. Dugger, J. Eastman, T. Palmer, D. Siniff and I. Stirling, as well as anonymous reviewers. P. Nelson introduced us to the image analysis software to determine toothfish frequency of occurrence by size class, with that analysis completed by Abra Kaiser. Much appreciated statistical analysis advice was given by Leo Salas and Nadav Nur of Point Blue Conservation Science. An anonymous reviewer provided very useful suggestions towards improving our paper.
Preparation of this paper was principally funded by National Science Foundation (NSF) grants ANT 0944411 and PLR 1543541 to D.G. Ainley and FAIN 1935870 to G. Ballard and K. Dugger. We thank Claire Parkinson, Ron Kwok and NASA for providing data on sea-ice extent and Ross Gyre speed and Kevin Arrigo and Gert van Dijken of Stanford University for the use of various biophysical variables derived from satellite sensors. Weddell seal data collection was most recently supported by NSF grants ANT 1141326 and 1640481 to J.J. Rotella, R.A. Garrott and D.B. Siniff, and prior NSF grants to R.A. Garrott, J.J. Rotella, D.B. Siniff and J.W. Testa. Funding for P.O'B. Lyver and K. Barton was provided by New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment grants (C09527, C09X0510, C01X1001, C01X1710). Adélie penguin data, not previously published, were provided by Antarctica New Zealand (thanks are given to Fiona Shanhun), supported by funding from the New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment. This is Point Blue Conservation Science contribution number 2489.
Author contributions
All authors conducted fieldwork, including some handling of the aerial photography and processing, that resulted in the penguin data analysed in the paper, and all contributed ideas to the paper's development as well as edits to the manuscript. Most of the writing was drafted by DGA and VM; data analysis was conducted by VM assisted by DGA.
Competing interests
The authors declare none.