Penguin fingerprinting enables migration tracking14/12/2009 10:21:25King penguins. Credit ZSL/Tom Hart. December 2009. Penguins' DNA is being used for the first time to study how they migrate between colonies. Researchers from The Zoological Society of London (ZSL) and the University of Sheffield have identified genetic markers that can be used to track the movement of penguins and ultimately determine whether Antarctica's changing climate is driving them from their favoured breeding sites. South Georgia Macaroni penguins By collecting penguin feathers and extracting their DNA, scientists can now determine the relationships between different birds within a colony, enabling them to follow the movement of individuals and populations. The markers have already been used to make a population map of macaroni penguins around South Georgia and are now being expanded to all species of penguin on the Antarctic Peninsula.
Penguins responding to climate change Penguins are not only threatened by climate change, but are also under increasing pressure from direct competition with fisheries. Studying them is notoriously difficult because they live in very harsh environments and are hard to track. This new monitoring tool enables scientists to follow their populations and address the threats that they face. Tom Hart is now launching a series of expeditions to collect samples and plot how penguins move around the Southern Ocean.
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Read the comments about this article and leave your own comment