Remote Sensing of Antarctic Penguin Populations

Penguins, high trophic-level predators almost exclusively confined to the Southern Ocean, are believed to be particularly susceptible to the unprecedented climatic changes that are currently being experienced in the region. Indeed, the two species of interest to this research, the chinstrap and gent...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Steadman Jones, Matthew
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.24901
https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/277583
Description
Summary:Penguins, high trophic-level predators almost exclusively confined to the Southern Ocean, are believed to be particularly susceptible to the unprecedented climatic changes that are currently being experienced in the region. Indeed, the two species of interest to this research, the chinstrap and gentoo penguins, are designated as ‘indicator species’ or sentinels of change within the natural environment by the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR), the responsible international agency for conserving Antarctic marine life. However, despite the intrinsic role that the species play, there is a dearth of knowledge about even basic demographic and biological aspects (census, distribution, habitat requirements, lifecycles) due, in the main, to the significant environmental and logistical barriers that are presented when considering field surveys within the region. As such, the potential of remote sensing applications and aligned software are beginning to be realised and are proving particularly apt at augmenting the data collected from the more traditional methods of ground-surveys and the laborious counting of species manually from imagery. To test this belief, freely-available ‘open-source’ software was used to design and develop research-specific methodological approaches to provide both population census information and to calculate nesting densities from aerial photography taken of the Cape Shirreff rookery, Livingston Island, the South Shetland Islands; with open-source software explicitly chosen in preference to commercial packages to test the potential of and for such software and the approaches described herein to be used by all, regardless of background and experience. The methodological approaches developed produced very favourable results: for population census, the counts were within 5% of the actual in-situ ground-counts recorded by the US Antarctic Marine Living Resources (US AMLR) programme; whilst nest-to-nest distances and colony density calculations correlated ...