Abstract :
The arrival in January 2001 in the south-west Ross Sea of two giant icebergs, C16 and B15A,
subsequently had dramatic affects on two emperor penguin colonies. B15A collided with the north-west
tongue of the Ross Ice Shelf at Cape Crozier, Ross Island, in the following months and destroyed the
penguins’ nesting habitat. The colony totally failed in 2001, and years after, with the icebergs still in place,
exhibited reduced production that ranged from 0 to 40% of the 1201 chicks produced in 2000. At Beaufort
Island, 70 km NW of Crozier, chick production declined to 6% of the 2000 count by 2004. Collisions with
the Ross Ice Shelf at Cape Crozier caused incubating adults to be crushed, trapped in ravines, or to abandon
the colony and, since 2001, to occupy poorer habitat. The icebergs separated Beaufort Island from the Ross
Sea Polynya, formerly an easy route to feeding and wintering areas. This episode has provided a glimpse of
events which have probably occurred infrequently since the West Antarctic Ice Sheet began to retreat 12 000
years ago. The results allow assessment of recovery rates for one colony decimated by both adult and chick
mortality, and the other colony by adult abandonment and chick mortality.
Keywords :
B15A , Beaufort Island , Aptenodytes forsteri , Cape Crozier , Ross Ice Shelf