Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-m6dg7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-17T14:01:45.237Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Adélie penguin colonies in eastern Prydz Bay: ‘biological indicators’ of exploration history and political change

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 October 2009

F.I. Norman
Affiliation:
Department of Zoology, Melbourne University, Parkville, Victoria 3052, Australia

Abstract

Temporally and spatially increasing information on the distribution of Adélie penguin (Pygoscelis adeliae) breeding sites is used as an index of various national activities in eastern Prydz Bay, East Antarctica. Recorded instances of such sites are used to indicate both exploration and enhanced local knowledge. While Norwegians discovered the area (1935), and revisited it (1937), reports of penguins were minimal. The 1938 Ellsworth expedition added few details and the potential of Operation Highjump (1947) photographs to delimit breeding sites was never realised. Observations by Australian expeditioners from the mid-1950s onwards, supplemented to some extent by those from the Soviet Union, increased information substantially. When Davis station was established (January 1957), at least five breeding sites were known around eastern Prydz Bay. By 1973 this had increased to 23 or 24 sites, mostly north of the Sørsdal Glacier, which had apparently acted as a barrier to land-based exploration. Data available to 1980 showed 20 sites in the Vestfold Hills, added two in the Rauer Group, and omitted some recorded earlier. Ground surveys of the Vestfold Hills (November 1973) increased known sites slightly, discounted erroneous records, and massively increased numbers of individual colonies. In 1981 an air survey recognised 24 sites in the Vestfold Hills and increased those known to 47. In approximately the same period, official Soviet records showed perhaps four sites in the Vestfold Hills and another in the Rauer Group. Early reports provided poor estimates of breeding population sizes — totals of some 130,000 (or 174,200) pairs in the Vestfold Hills in 1973 are compared with perhaps 196,600 in 1981, with another 129,000 pairs to the south. By 1983 locations of breeding sites in the Vestfold Hills were well established, and this was achieved in southern Prydz Bay following publication of 1981 survey results.

Progression of information regarding breeding sites in eastern Prydz Bay was slow. Initial Australian activities were slight following acceptance of its Antarctic Territory (1933). However, a Soviet Antarctic whaling fleet, uncertainty regarding American and Soviet intentions, and the imminent International Geophysical Year increased Australian interest. A station was established, local search areas expanded, and enhanced details regarding penguin breeding sites and colonies followed. Data reviews and surveys followed increasing international interest in southern ecosystems. Improved knowledge regarding the species' local populations reflected changing political agendas. Indeed, ‘knowledge’ itself gave early support to territorial claims. Participation in international surveys became an acceptable scientific endeavour, anticipated under Treaty agreements and promoted by associated organisations. In such fora, surveys and monitoring are expected, although not necessarily furthering the strength of existing claims.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2000

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Anonymous. 1935a. Norwegian discoveries in the Antarctic, 1935. Polar Record 2 (10): 126129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anonymous. 1935b. Nytt Norsk land i Antarktis. Polarårboken 2: 131132.Google Scholar
Barkov, N.I., and others. 1962. Report on observations made by the Soviet expedition in 1956–1960. Information Bulletin of the Soviet Antarctic Expedition 4: 95131. Translated in 1964 from original: Otchet o nablyudeniyakh vypolnennykh Sovetskoy antarkticheskoy ekspeditsiyey v 1956–1960 gg. Sovetskaya Antarkticheskaya Ekspeditsiya. Informatsionnyy Byulleten 34.Google Scholar
Bakaev, V.G. (editor). 1966. Atlas Antarktiki [Atlas of Antarctica]. Moscow: USSR Academy of Sciences.Google Scholar
Bertrand, K.J. 1971. Americans in Antarctica 1775–1948. New York: American Geographical Society.Google Scholar
Bhikharidas, A.K., Whitehead, M.D., and Peterson, J.A.. 1992. Mapping Adélie penguin rookeries in the Vestfold Hills and Rauer Islands, East Antarctica, using SPOT HRV data. International Journal of Remote Sensing 13: 1577–1583.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, D.A. 1965. Breeding biology of the snow petrel Pagodroma nivea (Forster). ANARE Scientific Reports Series B(1) Zoology 89.Google Scholar
Burgess, J.S., Spate, A.P., and Norman, F.I.. 1992. Environmental impacts of station development in the Larsemann Hills, Princess Elizabeth Land, East Antarctica. Journal of Environmental Management 36: 297299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christensen, L. 1938. My last expedition to the Antarctic 1936–1937. Oslo: Johan Grundt Tanum.Google Scholar
Christensen, L. 1939. Recent reconnaissance flights in the Antarctic. Geographical Journal 94: 192203.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
CCAMLR. 1989. Report of the Working Group for the CCAMLR Ecosystem Monitoring Program. In: Report of the eighth meeting of the Scientific Committee. Hobart: SC-CCAMLR: 299347.Google Scholar
Cooper, J., and Woehler, E.J.. 1994. Consumption of Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) by seabirds during summer in the Prydz Bay region, Antarctica. In: El-Sayed, S.Z. (editor). Southern Ocean ecology: the BIOMASS perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press: 247260.Google Scholar
Croxall, J. 1985. The BIOMASS Working Party on Bird Ecology. Cormorant 13: 12.Google Scholar
Department of Arts, Sport, the Environment, Tourism and Territories. 1991a. Amanda Bay, Antarctica, 1:100,000. Canberra: Department of Arts, Sport, the Environment, Tourism and Territories.Google Scholar
Department of Arts, Sport, the Environment, Tourism, and Territories. 1991b. Larsemann Hills, Princess Elizabeth Land, Antarctica, 1:25,000. Canberra: Department of Arts, Sport, the Environment, Tourism and Territories.Google Scholar
Department of Arts, Sport, the Environment, Tourism and Territories. 1992. Rauer Group, Princess Elizabeth Land, Antarctica, 1:50,000. Canberra: Department of Arts, Sport, the Environment, Tourism and Territories.Google Scholar
Division of National Mapping. 1958. Vestfold Hills, Australian Antarctic Territory, 1:100,000. Canberra: Division of National Mapping.Google Scholar
Division of National Mapping. 1982. Vestfold Hills, Princess Elizabeth Land, 1:50,000. Canberra: Division of National Mapping.Google Scholar
Division of National Mapping. 1983. Vestfold Hills, Princess Elizabeth Land, 1:100,000. Second edition. Canberra: Division of National Mapping.Google Scholar
Dodds, K.J. 1997. Antarctica and the modern geographical imagination. Polar Record 33 (184): 4762.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dubovskoi, B.V., and Lazarev, G.E.. 1970. Primeneniye metodov geodezii I aerofotos'yemki pri issledovanii Antarktiki [Geodesy and aerial photographic survey in Antarctic investigation]. In: Bugaev, V.A. (editor). Osnovnyye itogi izucheniya Antarktiki za 10 let [Soviet Antarctic research 1956–1966: proceedings of a conference]. Moscow: 170185.Google Scholar
Ellsworth, L. 1939. My four Antarctic expeditions. National Geographical Magazine 76: 129138.Google Scholar
El Sayed, S.Z. (editor). 1994. Southern Ocean ecology: the BIOMASS perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Gemandt, H. 1980. Dokumentation über die Ergebnisse der DDR-Erkundungsexpedition (EREX 79/80) in Rahmen der 25-SAE (Saison 1979/80). Unpublished report to Ministry of Environmental Protection and Water Economy, DDR.Google Scholar
Handmer, J., Wilder, M., and Dovers, S.. 1993. Australian approaches to Antarctic conservation. In: Handmer, J., and Wilder, M. (editors). Towards a conservation strategy for the Australian Antarctic Territory. Canberra: Centre for Resource and Environmental Studies, Australian National University: 1740.Google Scholar
Hansen, H.E. 1946. Atlas over dele av det Antarktiske kystland. Oslo: Grøndahl and Sons.Google Scholar
Hay, M. 1962. Station report – Davis 1961. Unpublished report by officer-in-charge. Kingston: Australian Antarctic Division.Google Scholar
Heyerdahl, E.F. 1936. Kartskisse av nyopdaget kyststrekning mellem 72° og 81° øst lengde samt M/T. Thorshavnsfører, kaptein Klarius Mikkelsen, Mars 1935. Sandefjord: Sandefjordmuseene, AR. S. KART 404.Google Scholar
Horne, R.S.C. 1980. Preliminary survey of the distribution of penguins in the Australian Antarctic Territory, Macquarie Island, Heard Island and the McDonald Islands. Unpublished report presented at SCAR BIOMASS Bird Ecology Working Party, Queenstown, New Zealand, 10 1980.Google Scholar
Horne, R.S.C. 1983. The distribution of penguin breeding colonies on the Australian Antarctic Territory, Heard Island, the McDonald Islands, and Macquarie Island. ANARE Research Notes 9.Google Scholar
Johnstone, G.W., Lugg, D.J., and Brown, D.A.. 1973. The biology of the Vestfold Hills, Antarctica. ANARE Scientific Reports Series B (1) Zoology 123.Google Scholar
Korotkevich, Ye.S. 1958. Observations on birds during the first wintering of the Soviet Antarctic Expedition, 1956–1957. Information Bulletin of the Soviet Antarctic Expedition 1: 149152. Translated in 1964 from original: Nablyudeniya nad ptitsami vo vremya pervoy zimovski Sovetskoy antarkticheskoy ekspeditsii v 1956–1957 gg. Sovetskaya Antarkticheskaya Ekspeditsiya. Informatsionnyy Byulleten 3: 83–87.Google Scholar
Korotkevich, Ye.S. 1959. Ptitsy vostochnoyAntarktidy [Birds of eastern Antarctica]. Problemy Arktiki i Antarktiki 1: 95108.Google Scholar
Korotkevich, Ye.S. 1980. Data on penguin colonies. Unpublished report presented at SCAR BIOMASS Bird Ecology Working Party, Queenstown, New Zealand, 10 1980.Google Scholar
Law, P. 1956. Australian National Antarctic Research Expedition, 1955. Geographical Journal 22: 3139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Law, P. 1959. The Vestfold Hills. ANARE Reports Series A 1.Google Scholar
Law, P. 1983. Antarctic odyssey. Melbourne: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Law, P. 1995. You have to be lucky: Antarctic and other adventures. Kenthurst, NSW: Kangaroo Press.Google Scholar
Lebedev, V.L. 1959. Antarctica. Moscow: Foreign Language Publishing House.Google Scholar
Lewis, D., and George, M., (editors). 1984. The initial scientific reports of the Mawson Anniversary and Frozen Sea expeditions. Windsor, NSW: Oceanic Research Foundation (Occasional publication 1).Google Scholar
Lewis, D., and George, M.. 1987. Icebound in Antarctica. London: Martin Seeker & Warburg.Google Scholar
Maksimov, I.V. 1958. Oceanographic research of the Soviet Research Expedition. Information Bulletin of the Soviet Antarctic Expedition 1: 48. Translated in 1964 from original: Okeanograficheskiye issledovaniya Sovetskikh antarkticheskikh ekspeditsiy. Sovetskaya Antarkticheskaya Ekspeditsiya. Informatsionnyy Byulleten 1:7–11.Google Scholar
Markov, K.K., Bardin, V.I., and Orlov, A.I.. 1962. Fizikogeograficheskaya kharakteristika beregovoy polos y Vostochnoy Antarktidy [Physical geographical characteristics of the coast line of eastern Antarctic]. Moscow: Izdatel'stvo Moskovskogo Universiteta.Google Scholar
Markov, K.K., Bardin, V.I., Lebedev, V.L., Orlov, A.I., and Suetova, I.A.. 1968. Geografiya Antarktidy [The geography of Antarctica]. Moscow: Mysl'.Google Scholar
McLeod, I.R. 1960. Preliminary report on geological work during the relief voyage of the MV Magga Dan, January–March, 1960. Unpublished report. Kingston: Australian Antarctic Division.Google Scholar
Mikkelsen, K. 1935. Opdagelsen av Ingrid Christensen Land. Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift 5: 372376.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Montague, T.L. 1988. Birds of Prydz Bay, Antarctica: distribution and abundance. Hydrobiology 165: 227237.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norman, F.I., and Burgess, J.S.. In press. The history of discovery and exploration of the Larsemann Hills area, Princess Elizabeth Land, East Antarctica. In: Burgess, J.S., and Norman, F.I. (editors). Proceedings of a symposium on the Larsemann Hills, Princess Elizabeth Land, East Antarctica. ANARE Research Notes.Google Scholar
Norman, F.I., Gibson, J.A.E., and Burgess, J.S.. 1998. Klarius Mikkelsen's 1935 landing in the Vestfold Hills, East Antarctica: some fiction and some facts. Polar Record 34 (191): 293304.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ravich, M.G. 1958. Some results of geological investigations by the Soviet Antarctic Expedition. Information Bulletin of the Soviet Antarctic Expedition 1: 6467. Translated in 1964 from original: Nekotoryye itogi geologicheskikh issledovaniy Sovetskoy antarkticheskoy eskspeditsii. Sovetskaya Antarkticheskaya Ekspeditsiya. Informatsionnyy Byulleten 2: 13–16.Google Scholar
Roscoe, J.H. 1952. Contributions to the study of Antarctic surface features by photogeographical methods. Unpublished PhD thesis. College Park: University of Maryland.Google Scholar
SCAR Bulletin. 1973. SCAR Bulletin 43. Polar Record 16 (103): 621655.Google Scholar
SCAR Bulletin. 1982. SCAR Bulletin 72. Polar Record 21 (132): 309322.Google Scholar
Somov, M.M. 1958. Soviet research on the Antarctic continent. Information Bulletin of the Soviet Antarctic Expedition 1: 14. Translated in 1964 from original: Sovetskie issledovaniia na Antarkticheskom materike. Sovetskaya Antarkticheskaya Ekspeditsiya. Informatsionnyy Byulleten 1: 7–10.Google Scholar
Stallman, S.E. (compiler). 1983. Gazetteerof the Australian Antarctic Territory. ANARE Research Notes 15.Google Scholar
Sullivan, W. 1957. Quest fora continent. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company.Google Scholar
Swan, R.A. 1961. Australians in the Antarctic: interest, activity and endeavour. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.Google Scholar
Vtyurin, B.I. 1958. Structure of winter fast ice in eastern Antarctica. Information Bulletin of the Soviet Antarctic Expedition 1: 198203. Translated in 1964 from original: Stroyeniye odnoletnego morskogo pripaya v Vostochnoy Antarktide. Sovetskaya Antarkticheskaya Ekspeditsiya. Informatsionnyy Byulleten 4.Google Scholar
Whitehead, M.D., and Johnstone, G.W.. 1990. The distribution and estimated abundance of Adélie penguins breeding in Prydz Bay, Antarctic. Proceedings of the NIPR symposium. Polar Biology 3: 9198.Google Scholar
Wilkins, H. 1939. Report of the Ellsworth Antarctic flight expedition, 1938–39. Unpublished report to the Australian Minister for External Affairs, 6 02 1939.Google Scholar
Wilson, G.J. 1983. Distribution and abundance of Antarctic and sub-Antarctic penguins: a synthesis of current knowledge. BIOMASS Scientific Series 4.Google Scholar
Woehler, E.J., and Croxall, J.P.. 1997. The status and trends of Antarctic and sub-Antarctic seabirds. Marine Ornithology 25: 4366.Google Scholar
Woehler, E.J., and Riddle, M.J.. 1998. Spatial relationships of Adélie penguin colonies: implications for assessing population changes from remote imagery. Antarctic Science 10: 449454.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woehler, E.J., Penney, R.L., Creet, S.M., and Burton, H.R.. 1994. Impacts of human visitors on breeding success and long-term population trends in Adélie penguins at Casey, Australia. Polar Biology 4: 269274.Google Scholar
Woehler, E.J., Tierney, T.J., and Burton, H.R.. 1989. The distribution and abundance of Adélie penguins, Pygoscelis adeliae, at the Vestfold Hills, 1973. ANARE Research Notes 70.Google Scholar