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Penguindex: a Living Planet Index for Pygoscelis species penguins identifies key eras of population change

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Abstract

As one of the best studied components of the Southern Ocean food web, Pygoscelis penguins serve as an important window into the larger marine ecosystem, but the patchiness and heterogeneity of the census data available have made it difficult to assess trends in a policy-accessible way. Here we introduce a Pygoscelis penguin-specific biodiversity index, the ‘Penguindex,’ using the framework of the Living Planet Index (LPI), distilling 40 year population trends of pygoscelid penguins for the first time into a single pan-Antarctic indicator for use by policymakers. We also calculate species- and region-specific indices from which discrete eras of population dynamics can be identified. These indices, similar to the LPI itself, do not provide estimates of changes in absolute abundance of species but, instead, reflect comparable population trends and the relative magnitude of these changes. We find that the Adélie Penguin (Pygoscelis adeliae) index was relatively stable across the Antarctic since 1980, with declines in regional indices across the Antarctic Peninsula region being contrasted by increases in regional indices for the Ross Sea and East Antarctica. The Chinstrap Penguin (Pygoscelis antarctica) index across the Antarctic declined by 61%. In stark contrast, the index for Gentoo Penguin (Pygoscelis papua) has increased seven-fold. Our analysis also identifies several marked eras of regional pygoscelid population change that may help identify key mechanistic drivers. We expect that the Penguindex will act as a useful reference tool for policymakers and hope that, by following this example, other taxonomic groups in the Antarctic might be tracked using the Living Planet Index framework. Importantly, our development of the Penguindex should facilitate the much-needed integration of Antarctic data into global biodiversity monitoring.

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Data availability

All data, R scripts, and results supporting this study are available at Zenodo, https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7884501.

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Acknowledgements

The authors would like to dedicate this manuscript to Ben Collen (1978–2018), who initiated the idea for a Penguindex more than a decade ago with sketches of a manuscript we have now finally completed.

Funding

H.J.L. and E.J.T. acknowledge funding from the Pew Marine Fellowship Program. C.C.C. acknowledges financial support from the Institute for Advanced Computational Sciences at Stony Brook University.

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Contributions

HJL, LM, and TH initially conceived of the Penguindex (along with Ben Collen). HJL, along with CCC developed the underlying penguin database used for analysis and developed the state-space model. ET designed and completed the LPI analyses presented in the manuscript. ET and HJL led the manuscript writing. All authors read and approved the manuscript.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Heather J. Lynch.

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The authors have no financial or proprietary interests in any material discussed in this article.

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Talis, E.J., Che-Castaldo, C., Hart, T. et al. Penguindex: a Living Planet Index for Pygoscelis species penguins identifies key eras of population change. Polar Biol 46, 707–718 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00300-023-03148-2

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00300-023-03148-2

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