Towards a Penguin Global Conservation Agenda promoted by the IUCN SSC Penguin Specialist Group

Abstract: Penguins are in trouble. The International Union for Conservation of Nature lists 10 of the 18 species as threatened, making penguins the second most threatened family of seabirds. The IUCN Penguin Specialist Group (PSG) is developing a Penguin Global Conservation Agenda. In 2016, the PSG...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: 3rd World Seabird Conference 2021, Chiaradia, Andre
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Underline Science Inc. 2021
Subjects:
Dee
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.48448/ty82-5894
https://underline.io/lecture/34725-towards-a-penguin-global-conservation-agenda-promoted-by-the-iucn-ssc-penguin-specialist-group
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Summary:Abstract: Penguins are in trouble. The International Union for Conservation of Nature lists 10 of the 18 species as threatened, making penguins the second most threatened family of seabirds. The IUCN Penguin Specialist Group (PSG) is developing a Penguin Global Conservation Agenda. In 2016, the PSG coordinated threatened status reviews for the IUCN Red List based on penguin status data and conservation needs from its membership. The PSG also held two conservation strategy workshops to: 1) identify gaps in penguin research and conservation towards increasing population resilience in wild penguins and minimising threats and impacts, and 2) develop consensus on the species considered to be conservation priorities. Here, we summarise the PSG work to-date to guide and support future penguin research and to inform much-needed policy and legislative interventions. Among the top 12 research priorities, four are relevant to all penguins: (i) assessing population trends, (ii) determining vital biological rates, (iii) documenting environmental changes, and (iv) improving understanding of foraging ecology. We also identified four other conservation priorities relevant to several species: (v) improving understanding of effects of fisheries, (vi) enhancing support for marine spatial planning, (vii) developing species-specific action plans, and (viii) improving stakeholder engagement. Conservation action is needed for all penguin taxa, but we recognised that African, Galapagos and Yellow-Eyed Penguins need immediate scientific collaboration and policy interventions. We discuss crucial avenues for improving science-informed conservation of these species. The conservation actions for penguins would have broad biodiversity benefits in the Southern Hemisphere's marine biodiversity hotspots. By fostering communication and policy action toward these priorities, our goal is to ensure wild penguins exist in perpetuity. Authors: Pablo García Borboroglu¹, P. Dee Boersma¹, Susie Ellies², Charly-Andre Bost³, Tom Schneider⁴, Philip Seddon⁵, Alejandro Simeone⁶, Phil Trathan⁷, Lauren Waller⁸, Barbara Wienecke⁹, Natasha Gownaris¹, Andre Chiaradia¹⁰ ¹University of Washington, ²International Rhino Foundation, ³Centre d'Etudes Biologiques de Chizé, CNRS, ⁴Detroit Zoological Society, ⁵University of Otago, ⁶Universidad Andres Bello, ⁷British Antarctic Survey, ⁸University of the Western Cape, ⁹Australian Antarctic Division, ¹⁰Phillip Island Nature Parks