12/08/2018

Penguin Island's Penguins In Battle For Survival Against Climate Change, Human Threats

ABC NewsPamela Medlen

Dr Cannell says the little penguins face multiple threats to their survival. (ABC News)
They're small, cute and lure about 130,000 visitors to their island every year.
But the little penguin population that gives WA's Penguin Island its name is in danger on several fronts.
The 12-hectare island is just 600 metres off the coast of Rockingham, in Perth's south, and home to about 1000 little penguins, the largest colony that far west in the world.
Penguin Island is just 600 metres off the Rockingham coast. (ABC News: West Matteeussen)
But changing weather conditions and rising ocean temperatures are playing havoc with their breeding cycles.
Belinda Cannell has been monitoring the penguins on the island for almost 25 years and has watched the population halve in the past decade.
"We see a lot of variation in the timing and the success of breeding, but … the breeding success has been much lower than in previous years," Dr Cannell said.

A destructive marine heatwave
In 2011, a marine heatwave caused a current of water 5 degrees Celsius warmer than average to travel down the west coast of Australia.
It culled several species of small fish that make up the little penguin's diet.
The penguin population on the island is closely monitored. (ABC News: Pamela Medlen)
"Since then those sea surface temperatures have been above average in most years and particularly in the winter months, so this is what we're thinking is really impacting the penguins' availability to get food close by and therefore to breed," Dr Cannell said.
"Their main resource was whitebait — they also eat pilchard and anchovy and blue spratt — but with the marine heatwave, we saw an increase in the tropical sardine in their diet which we had never been seen before."
She said the penguins needed to travel further and further from the island to find food, sometimes hundreds of kilometres down the coast as far as Busselton or Margaret River.
"That's a long way for a little penguin to go and they're away for 15 days sometimes. That means the partner's sitting on the eggs and getting to a point where they have to abandon the eggs because they're just too hungry," she said.
"Then once the chicks have hatched they have to stay closer to the island, … and if they haven't got enough food they either stay out for longer or they come back and there's less food to feed the chicks."
Dr Cannell says warmer sea temperatures decrease food availability for penguins. (ABC News: Pamela Medlen)
Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions marine park coordinator Melissa Evans said climate change had brought more frequent and severe storms, which caused erosion.
"That means that these little cliffs form, but the penguins can't get up the cliffs to their nest boxes or their nesting sites because they can't walk up these vertical cliffs, so that means they can't get back to swap with their partner or feed their chicks," Dr Cannell said.
Hotter West Australian summers were also killing penguins, she said, and one of her PhD students had been experimenting with different ways of protecting the penguin nesting boxes from heat.
Some of the nesting boxes had been painted with heat reflective paint, others had been covered in a shade cloth tent or had holes drilled into them and been orientated to aid airflow.

Human impact on penguins
Dr Cannell said about 25 per cent of penguin deaths were due to boat injuries.
"We can't do much about climate change and we can't change the fish that are available in the sea, but what we can do is reduce any other impact we have control over — managing people on the island, trying to have nest boxes that are cooler for them," she said.
"Reducing impacts in the water, try and make people aware the penguins are out there and their boating, they need to be slowing down and be aware the penguins are often just a metre under the surface of the water and they're difficult to see.
"Taking away your fishing line, don't leave your plastic pollution around because the penguins get entangled in that, and making sure that any coastal development we have is sensitive to where the penguins are."
Penguins have little resilience when it comes to environmental changes, Dr Cannell says. (ABC News: Pamela Medlen)
Ms Evans said the DCBA was working with the City of Rockingham to make any events on the mainland foreshore plastic-free.
"Because it's a popular tourist location as well, it's important for us to try to balance people being able to use the island for recreation, but also conserving the environment so the wildlife is still able to use it successfully," Ms Evans said.
"There's extensive boardwalks around the island now so that gives people access to all of the great lookout spots and all the fantastic beaches, but it also keeps them up off the areas that are used by penguins."
Funding to continue her research is running out, but Dr Cannell is still collecting samples of faeces and downy feathers in the hope they can one day be analysed to find out whether the penguins are adapting to changing food sources and what can be done to protect both the fish and the penguin colony.
"At the moment it's not looking good, the viability of this population is decreasing and the population estimates have halved since I did an estimate in 2007, so that's not a good sign," she said.
"We need to try to do everything that we can to improve the breeding success of these birds and have this colony here for another 100, 200, 300 years to come."
Dr Cannell says penguin numbers have halved since 2007. (ABC News: Pamela Medlan)
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PM's Reef Plunge Rips Up Grant Rules

The Age - Editorial

The circumstances of the Coalition government’s unheralded transfer of almost half a billion dollars of taxpayers’ money to a charity that was not even applying for public funding are profoundly puzzling and alarming.
The monumental payment was folded into the May budget, and has rightly been referred by the Senate to a committee. That investigation has been extended for six weeks and is due to report in mid-August.
The ALP and the Greens are agitating for the money to be reversed. That seems premature. We should all await the committee's finding and any recommendations before making any decisions of such magnitude. However, there is a compelling case the money should be frozen until the community can be re-assured.
The government appears to have broken almost every tenet of good public policy in its transfer of $444 million to the Great Barrier Reef Foundation. Photo: Gary Cranitch

The Auditor-General is also considering a probe. That should be launched as soon as possible, for it appears the government has brazenly broken almost every tenet of public policy and probity in its transfer of $444 million to the Great Barrier Reef Foundation, a not-for-profit outfit with a full-time staff of six. The organisation was shocked to learn it had, as its chief put it, ‘‘won the lotto’’, and would seem to be of insufficient scale to administer such a huge sum.
One of the foundation's earliest supporters and a former board member, Michael Myer , who left the organisation more than a decade ago amid concern about the increasing influence of big business, including fossil-fuel energy firms, on the foundation’s activities – greeted news of the grant with disbelief to the point of derision. Independent public policy experts are baffled by the government’s evident failure to follow due process, let alone perform anything like due diligence.
Were the issues not so serious, this extraordinary situation would be the stuff of stupendous political satire. Protecting the Great Barrier Reef, which is facing existential pressure from man-made climate change, is of huge importance ecologically and economically. It is welcome that the government, albeit arguably too late, is seeking to ameliorate the damage and risks of which scientists have long been warning.
But that massive sum should be frozen until the public can be confident that even a basic business case and cost/benefit analysis exists and can be tested. There should have been an open tender. There should be specific targets against which any efforts financed by that money can be independently measured and verified. The situation is even more bizarre because such an astounding series of lapses occurred under the direct watch of Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Environment and Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg, suggesting recklessness and arrogance at the very top of our government.
They both maintain a thorough and transparent process was followed. This simply does not seem to stand scrutiny. Indeed it is difficult to imagine how the process could have been any more flimsy and unaccountable without being negligent. The government looks duplicitous or incompetent - or both. It’s now up to the Senate committee and the Auditor-General to clean up this tragi-comic abuse of public trust and public funds.

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Heatwave-Related Deaths Influenced By Prior Acclimatisation To Warmth

FairfaxPeter Hannam

Quick quiz: which city is more likely to suffer heatwave-related mortality, Melbourne or Sydney?
The answer, according to a new study published this week in Climatic Change, is the southern city. Melbourne also tops the typically warmer capitals of Brisbane and Perth and, in absolute deaths, Adelaide.
Melbourne is more prone to deadly heatwaves than cities further north such as Sydney and Brisbane. Photo: Wayne Taylor
A key finding of the research is populations are more vulnerable when they get caught out by abrupt bouts of extreme heat, events that were less common in Sydney and Brisbane than those other capitals during the 2001-15 period studied.
"Melbourne is a unique case [among the five] as it's in a temperate zone but they get these massive increases in temperature," said Thomas Longden, senior researcher at UTS's Centre for Health Economics Research and Evaluation, and author of the report.
Melbourne had 1283 deaths recorded that could be related to extreme heatwaves, or not far shy of double Sydney's tally of 768 deaths on a per-capita basis, the study found.
On relative population sizes, Adelaide's 549 deaths was the highest of the five cities, with Perth and Brisbane recording mortality numbers of 532 and 220 cases of mortality, respectively.
Early season warmth on Saturday - at least in Sydney, where daytime temperatures were forecast to be climb about 7 degrees above the August average - was the latest reminder of the unseasonably mild conditions.
NSW as a whole had its warmest January-July period for daytime temperatures on record, and authorities are preparing for a busy start to the bushfire season as the intensifying drought extends to woodlands.
Dr Longden's study used a so-called Excess Heat Index developed by the Bureau of Meteorology as part of its heatwave warning service. Death rates rose markedly when heatwaves were not only hot in absolute temperatures but also compared with the previous 30 days.
"A lack of acclimatisation is an issue due to the physiological impact on people's thermoregulation," he said.
A key threshold appears to be reached when three-day average temperatures rise to more than 7 degrees above the 30-day average. Adelaide, for instance, had a spike in deaths when the index rose about 10 degrees over the January 27-30, 2009 period.
For Melbourne, the stand-out extreme case was the four consecutive days above 41 degrees on January 14-17, 2014, with temperatures 12 degrees above the preceding 30 days.
"It's about two to three days after the heatwave event when the mortality actually occurs," Dr Longden said, adding those most vulnerable often have existing health concerns, such as the elderly.
Pilot view of how the Bureau of Meteorology's heatwave index would have looked for January 5-7 2013. Photo: BoM
The findings point to ways authorities might improve their public health warnings in advance of a predicted heatwave. Victoria already modified their heat alert systems  after a 2009 event but more needs to be done, he said.
"There have been some public awareness campaigns...but some of the vulnerable people are the elderly who don't get those types of communications, or still get caught out by these rare and strange events that are very, very strong," Dr Longden said.
"Australians, even though we're used to hot summers, are still vulnerable," he said.
With climate change, heatwaves in Australia are predicted to become more frequent, last longer and be more intense, adding to the challenges facing all populations, including human.
"People will change their behaviour [and] have airconditioning, or try to decrease their exposure," Dr Longden said. "People who work in construction will have to stop work more often."
"How much you can offset that by behavioral changes is an open question," he said.

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