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Study: Climate change accelerates emperor penguin extinction risk by Sommer Brokaw Washington DC (UPI) Aug 3, 2021 Climate change is accelerating the extinction risk for emperor penguins, scientists said Tuesday. The penguin species endemic to Antarctica forms colonies on sea ice, which are projected to significantly decline due to ongoing greenhouse gas emissions. Researchers found that if sea ice declines at the rate currently projected by climate models, the species resiliency, redundancy and representation will be dramatically reduced and almost all colonies quasi-extinct by 2100, according to a new study published Tuesday in Wiley Online Library. The key findings support federal production of the species under the Endangered Species Act, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service submitted that listing proposal this week, according to a Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution statement. "Scientists have a responsibility to make people aware of the need for change through objective evidence," lead study author Stephanie Jenouvreir said in a press release. "With the help of a dedicated team, we put together this paper for the USFWS to provide additional analyses of future projections and help inform policy and protection for these species," said Jenouvreir, associate scientist and seabird ecologist at Woods Hole. Extreme events observed through recent satellite records amplified the projected declines from previous studies, researchers said. The penguin population will decline slowly until about 2040, but then the decline will accelerate as sea ice coverage drops below a usable threshold. The quasi-extinction by 2100 means 98% of colonies will have vanished, according to the study. "This study provides the best available science for projecting emperor penguin populations in the context of future climate change," Jenouvreir said. "The future of this iconic species depends on immediate actions to decarbonize society and increased protections for species endangered by climate change," she said.
Study: Giraffes are socially complex, misunderstood Washington DC (UPI) Aug 3, 2021 Giraffes are socially complex as elephants, but their communication has been misunderstood, a new study reveals. The largest hoofed herbivorous grazing animal of the African region still living was once thought to have no social structure since they spent a disproportionate part of the day feeding compared to other grazing or browsing animals. But studies in the last two decades started to suggest they were more complex. A study published Wednesday in Wiley Online Library has further def ... read more
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