2019-01-01_Discover

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44 DISCOVERMAGAZINE.COM


FLORA & FAUNA

From huge penguin colonies to the tiniest of ies, researchers are making some


extreme discoveries about Earth’s biodiversity — and the threats it faces.


BY MARK BARNA


Holy Tuxedo! It’s a Penguin-palooza!


Discovering a giant animal
colony is a big deal. Discovering
two, just miles apart, is crazy. But
that’s what scientists found off the
Antarctic Peninsula.
In Scientic Reports in March,
researchers announced the
discovery of two new Adélie
penguin colonies on the Danger
Islands, a 22-mile-long archipelago
on the northeast tip of the
peninsula, which juts toward Chile.
Only two other penguin colonies
in the world are larger. Altogether,
they counted 1.5 million birds on

the islands, more than doubling the
region’s population.
The islands, surrounded by
waters rich in krill (the penguins’
main food source), have long
been known as a popular penguin
hangout. But the size of both
populations, spotted and then
counted using satellite imagery
and drones, was unexpected,
says Heather Lynch, an ecologist
at Stony Brook University and
senior author of the paper.
The marine birds aren’t faring so
well on the peninsula’s west side,

Antarctica’s rocky Danger Islands (above) are
home to millions of penguins, including two
giant new colonies tallied using overhead
imagery (right), partly from drones (below).

Danger Islands

SOUTH AMERICA

ANTARCTICA
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