17/01/2026
A recovering puma population in Patagonia has found an unlikely new favourite prey: the Magellanic penguin. Efforts to restore large carnivores are transforming ecosystems worldwide, sometimes in surprising ways. In Patagonia, a recovering puma population has begun preying on Magellanic penguins, which colonized the coast after pumas disappeared a century ago. GPS and camera data revealed the highest puma density ever recorded, clustered around a small but abundant resource. Much like grizzly bears feeding on salmon runs, pumas showed unusually high social tolerance and concentrated movements. This unexpected behaviour reveals that as carnivores recolonize altered landscapes, they may adapt in ways that challenge long-held assumptions about solitary predators.
Read the New York Times article:
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/16/science/penguins-pumas-patagonia.html
Read the research article in Proceedings B:
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/rspb/article/292/2061/20252172/366096/A-marine-subsidy-reshapes-the-ecology-of-a-large?searchresult=1