Good News for King Penguins: Climate Change?

They're mating earlier and seeing more chicks survive. But that could change
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Mar 12, 2026 9:01 AM CDT
A Rare Critter Benefitting From Climate Change: King Penguins
In this photo provided by Gael Bardon, a king penguin chick hatches from its egg on Possession Island, Crozet Archipelago, Jan. 6, 2026.   (Gael Bardon/CSM/CNRS/IPEV via AP)

The warming world has disrupted the timing for plant and animal reproduction, and it's usually bad news for species that depend on each other—like flowers blooming too early and pollinating bees arriving too late. But researchers have found the rare critter that's getting a boost: King penguins. A new study of 19,000 king penguins in a sub-Antarctic island chain found their breeding is starting 19 days earlier than it did in 2000, reports the AP. Mating earlier has increased the breeding success rate by 40%, according to a study in Wednesday's journal Science Advances. The study of timing in nature is called phenology. It's been a major concern for biologists because predators and prey and pollinators and plants are mostly adapting to warmer climates at different rates. And that means crucial mismatches in timing.

It's especially common in birds and pollinating species such as bees. Most birds, especially in North America, aren't keeping pace with changes in phenology, according to Clemson University biological sciences professor Casey Youngflesh, who wasn't part of the study. Having a species like the king penguin adapt so well to seasonal shifts and timing changes "is unprecedented," said study co-author Celine Le Bohec, a seabird ecologist at the French science agency CNRS. "It's quite striking." Unlike other penguins—which are threatened with dwindling numbers because of earlier breeding—the king penguin has the ability to breed from late October to March. And they are taking advantage of that flexibility, Le Bohec said.

They are succeeding even though the water is warming and the food web that they rely on is changing with it, said Le Bohec and study lead author Gaël Bardon, a seabird ecologist at the Scientific Centre of Monaco. "They can adjust really well their foraging behavior," Bardon said. "We know that some birds are going directly to the south, to the polar front. Some are going to the north. Some are staying around the colony and so they can adjust their behavior." Le Bohec added that it may only be a temporary adjustment to an environment that is changing quickly. "So that's why for the moment the species is able to cope with this change, but till when? This, we don't know, because it's going very, very fast."

Other penguins that have limited diets are more threatened by changes. But king penguins—which are so abundant they are considered a species of least concern—can eat other prey besides the lanternfish that makes up their primary diet. Outside scientists are just as cautious as Le Bohec and Bardon over whether to declare the king penguins a rare good-news climate change story. "Winning for this species might mean losing for another species if they are competing for resources," Clemson's Youngflesh said.

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