Long‐term patterns in ecosystem phenology near Palmer Station, Antarctica, from the perspective of the Adélie penguin

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Date
2023-02-10
Authors
Cimino, Megan A.
Conroy, John A.
Connors, Elizabeth
Bowman, Jeff
Corso, Andrew
Ducklow, Hugh
Fraser, William
Friedlaender, Ari
Kim, Heather Hyewon
Larsen, Gregory D.
Moffat, Carlos
Nichols, Ross
Pallin, Logan
Patterson‐Fraser, Donna
Roberts, Darren
Roberts, Megan
Steinberg, Deborah K.
Thibodeau, Patricia
Trinh, Rebecca
Schofield, Oscar
Stammerjohn, Sharon
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DOI
10.1002/ecs2.4417
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Keywords
Bacteria
Climate change
Match–mismatch hypothesis
Penguins
Phenology
Phytoplankton
Polar regions
Sea ice
Whales
Zooplankton
Abstract
Climate change is leading to phenological shifts across a wide range of species globally. Polar oceans are hotspots of rapid climate change where sea ice dynamics structure ecosystems and organismal life cycles are attuned to ice seasonality. To anticipate climate change impacts on populations and ecosystem services, it is critical to understand ecosystem phenology to determine species activity patterns, optimal environmental windows for processes like reproduction, and the ramifications of ecological mismatches. Since 1991, the Palmer Antarctica Long‐Term Ecological Research (LTER) program has monitored seasonal dynamics near Palmer Station. Here, we review the species that occupy this region as year‐round residents, seasonal breeders, or periodic visitors. We show that sea ice retreat and increasing photoperiod in the spring trigger a sequence of events from mid‐November to mid‐February, including Adélie penguin clutch initiation, snow melt, calm conditions (low winds and warm air/sea temperature), phytoplankton blooms, shallow mixed layer depths, particulate organic carbon flux, peak humpback whale abundances, nutrient drawdown, and bacterial accumulation. Subsequently, from May to June, snow accumulates, zooplankton indicator species appear, and sea ice advances. The standard deviation in the timing of most events ranged from ~20 to 45 days, which was striking compared with Adélie penguin clutch initiation that varied <1 week. In general, during late sea ice retreat years, events happened later (~5 to >30 days) than mean dates and the variability in timing was low (<20%) compared with early ice retreat years. Statistical models showed the timing of some events were informative predictors (but not sole drivers) of other events. From an Adélie penguin perspective, earlier sea ice retreat and shifts in the timing of suitable conditions or prey characteristics could lead to mismatches, or asynchronies, that ultimately influence chick survival via their mass at fledging. However, more work is needed to understand how phenological shifts affect chick thermoregulatory costs and the abundance, availability, and energy content of key prey species, which support chick growth and survival. While we did not detect many long‐term phenological trends, we expect that when sea ice trends become significant within our LTER time series, phenological trends and negative effects from ecological mismatches will follow.
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© The Author(s), 2023. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Cimino, M. A., Conroy, J. A., Connors, E., Bowman, J., Corso, A., Ducklow, H., Fraser, W., Friedlaender, A., Kim, H. H., Larsen, G. D., Moffat, C., Nichols, R., Pallin, L., Patterson-Fraser, D., Roberts, D., Roberts, M., Steinberg, D. K., Thibodeau, P., Trinh, R., Schofield, O., Stammerjohn, S. Long-term patterns in ecosystem phenology near Palmer Station, Antarctica, from the perspective of the Adelie penguin. Ecosphere, 14(2), (2023): e4417, https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.4417.
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Cimino, M. A., Conroy, J. A., Connors, E., Bowman, J., Corso, A., Ducklow, H., Fraser, W., Friedlaender, A., Kim, H. H., Larsen, G. D., Moffat, C., Nichols, R., Pallin, L., Patterson-Fraser, D., Roberts, D., Roberts, M., Steinberg, D. K., Thibodeau, P., Trinh, R., Schofield, O., Stammerjohn, S. (2023). Long-term patterns in ecosystem phenology near Palmer Station, Antarctica, from the perspective of the Adelie penguin. Ecosphere, 14(2), e4417.
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