-
Kenya's economy faces climate change risks: World Bank
-
'Gritty' Philadelphia pitches itself as low-cost US World Cup choice
-
'I literally was a fool': Musk grilled in OpenAI trial
-
OpenAI facing 'waves' of US lawsuits over Canada mass shooting
-
Ticket price hikes not affecting summer air travel demand: IATA
-
Uber adds hotel booking in push to become 'everything app'
-
Oil spikes while stocks slip ahead of US Fed rate decision
-
Canada holds key rate steady, says will act if war inflation persists
-
Trump warns Iran better 'get smart soon' and accept nuclear deal
-
US Fed chief's plans in focus as central bank set to hold rates steady
-
German inflation jumps in April as energy costs surge
-
UBS first-quarter profits jump 80% on investment banking
-
Finnish lift maker Kone acquires German rival TKE, creating giant
-
Diving robot explores mystery of France's deepest shipwreck
-
Much-needed rains revive Iraq's fabled Mesopotamian Marshes
-
Adidas reports higher profits but warns of 'volatile' climate
-
TotalEnergies first-quarter profits surge amid Middle East war
-
King Charles to stress UK-US cultural, trade ties in New York
-
Mercedes-Benz profit slides amid cutthroat Chinese market
-
Cheaper, cleaner electric trucks overhaul China's logistics
-
Europe climate report signals rising extremes
-
An experimental cafe run by AI opens in Stockholm
-
Jerome Powell: Fed chair who stood up to Trump set to finish tenure on top
-
Pentagon makes deal to expand use of Google AI: reports
-
France unveils plan to ditch all fossil fuels by 2050
-
Crude back above $110 on Strait stalemate as US stocks retreat
-
Germany holds breath as stranded whale 'Timmy' sets off in barge
-
King Charles urges Western unity in speech to US Congress
-
US Supreme Court hears Cisco bid to halt Falun Gong suit
-
Reynolds jokes 'defibrillator' needed to watch new 'Welcome to Wrexham' series
-
Ex-NBA player Damon Jones pleads guilty in gambling probe
-
Nations kick off world-first fossil fuel exit talks in Colombia
-
Airbus profits slide as deliveries drop
-
Will fuel shortages ruin summer vacations?
-
Monk ends barefoot Sri Lanka trek with a dog and plea for peace
-
German bid to rescue 'Timmy' the whale passes key hurdle
-
US Fed expected to keep rates steady as Iran war effects ripple
-
UAE pulls out of OPEC oil cartels citing 'national interests'
-
Banking giant JP Morgan becomes Olympics sponsor
-
Croatia, Bosnia sign major gas pipeline deal
-
EU lawmakers back blockbuster long-term budget
-
Indian billionaire's son offers home for Escobar's hippos
-
BP reports huge profit rise in first quarter
-
Crude extends gains, stocks drop as Trump considers latest Iran proposal
-
How China block of AI deal could stop 'Singapore-washing'
-
Crude extends gains as Trump considers latest Iran proposal
-
Nations to kick off world-first fossil fuel exit talks
-
Opening remarks Tuesday in Elon Musk versus OpenAI
-
Taylor Swift files to trademark her voice amid AI clone boom
-
UN maritime agency rejects Hormuz tolls
Ice melt threatens emperor penguins during annual moult: researchers
Emperor penguins shed all their feathers once a year, a precarious ritual that may have become deadly as climate change pushes them into shrinking patches of Antarctic sea ice, researchers said Wednesday.
The flightless birds moult during summer, relying on stored fat to survive for several weeks until their waterproof coat grows back so they can swim and hunt in icy waters again.
Researchers from the British Antarctic Survey, analysing seven years of satellite images, accidentally discovered several moulting colonies along the extremely remote coastline of an area known as Marie Byrd Land.
As sea ice melted, the penguins were forced onto smaller spaces in increasingly large and tightly packed groups, the UK polar research organisation said in a statement.
In 2025, only 25 small groups of penguins were visible in the satellite images, it said. Prior to 2022, more than 100 groups had been spotted in the same region.
"While we don't know for sure what happened to those penguins, we know they can find new suitable breeding sites after ice loss, so it's possible they have established new moulting sites elsewhere," said Peter Fretwell, lead author and mapping expert at the British Antarctic Survey.
"But also it's possible that huge numbers of penguins perished after entering the Southern Ocean before they had replaced their waterproof feathers," Fretwell said.
"If this has happened, the situation for emperors as a species is even worse than we thought."
The researchers said that if emperor penguins are forced into the ocean before their feathers are replaced, they face exhaustion from increased energy use, hypothermia and increased risk from predators.
- Ice at record low -
Emperor penguin populations have shrunk by almost a quarter as global warming transforms their icy habitat, the British Antarctic Survey said in research published last year.
During the January-March Antarctic summer, emperor penguins from the Ross Sea in West Antarctica migrate as much as 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) to Marie Byrd Land to moult on stable sea ice, the researchers said Wednesday.
It is one of the few areas that historically retains its fast ice -- sea ice attached to the coast -- throughout the year.
The moulting process takes about four to five weeks and the penguins cannot go in the freezing water during that time.
The extent of Antarctic Sea ice fell to record lows between 2022 and 2024, accompanied by a drastic decrease in fast ice, the British Antarctic Survey said.
In the region they observed, sea ice coverage fell from a 50-year average of 500,000 square kilometres -- roughly the size of Spain -- to 100,000 square kilometres in 2023. Only 2,000 square kilometres of fast ice were left near the coast.
During those years, the sea ice broke before the penguins had finished moulting, raising fears that many may not have survived, the scientists said.
The survey's previous study found that some emperor penguin colonies lost all their chicks in recent years as the ice broke, plunging hatchlings into the sea before they were old enough to cope with the freezing ocean.
At current rates of warming, there is a 45 percent chance the species will become extinct by the turn of the century, the survey said.
X.Wong--CPN