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The conservation status and population decline of the African penguin deconstructed in space and time
Author(s) -
Sherley Richard B.,
Crawford Robert J. M.,
Blocq Andrew D.,
Dyer Bruce M.,
Geldenhuys Deon,
Hagen Christina,
Kemper Jessica,
Makhado Azwianewi B.,
Pichegru Lorien,
Tom Desmond,
Upfold Leshia,
Visagie Johan,
Waller Lauren J.,
Winker Henning
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
ecology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.17
H-Index - 63
ISSN - 2045-7758
DOI - 10.1002/ece3.6554
Subject(s) - iucn red list , population , endangered species , cape , abundance (ecology) , population growth , geography , ecology , population size , biology , demography , archaeology , sociology
Understanding changes in abundance is crucial for conservation, but population growth rates often vary over space and time. We use 40 years of count data (1979–2019) and Bayesian state‐space models to assess the African penguin Spheniscus demersus population under IUCN Red List Criterion A. We deconstruct the overall decline in time and space to identify where urgent conservation action is needed. The global African penguin population met the threshold for Endangered with a high probability (97%), having declined by almost 65% since 1989. An historical low of ~17,700 pairs bred in 2019. Annual changes were faster in the South African population (−4.2%, highest posterior density interval, HPDI: −7.8 to −0.6%) than the Namibian one (−0.3%, HPDI: −3.3 to +2.6%), and since 1999 were almost −10% at South African colonies north of Cape Town. Over the 40‐year period, the Eastern Cape colonies went from holding ~25% of the total penguin population to ~40% as numbers decreased more rapidly elsewhere. These changes coincided with an altered abundance and availability of the main prey of African penguins. Our results underline the dynamic nature of population declines in space as well as time and highlight which penguin colonies require urgent conservation attention.

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