Climate change has brought some drastic changes to the world and has produced great impacts across different places and among several species. Penguins are no exemptions as the recipient of this global phenomenon as the recent and most comprehensive study on Antarctica's penguins dug proofs that the count of flightless birds in the region is dramatically plunging.
Millions of people who wonder what exactly the count of flightless birds in the bottom part of the earth can now scratch that burden. According to the most comprehensive study on Antarctica's penguin, touted as the "USA News" report, the number of waddling birds in the remotest place on Earth has logged to 12 million.
In figures, it looks decent but based on well-known researcher Ron Naveen, who has spent years of his life counting these flightless birds, this is very alarming. He said that this result from the most comprehensive study on Antarctica's penguin is one great way to gauge the ongoing effects of global climate change to animals and bodies of water.
Naveen, who was the person behind the birth of CBS News 1987, pointed out that most comprehensive study on Antarctica's penguin has a bigger role that counting these flightless birds. He stressed that this research will be a great tool for the science community as the recent data showed signs of how quickly our planet gets warmer and warmer.
The most comprehensive study on Antarctica's penguin gauged for the first time the tally of five species of flightless birds including the emperor, Adélie, chinstrap, Gentoo, and macaroni. What is more painful about the results is that the total count of the species Adelie and Chinstrap were in serious dive as they were unable to adjust to the changing temperature that hampered their food supplies.