Berliner Boersenzeitung - S.Africa clinic hopes to save penguins' future

EUR -
AED 4.393318
AFN 77.747328
ALL 97.061495
AMD 452.609388
ANG 2.141116
AOA 1096.82506
ARS 1723.902185
AUD 1.716885
AWG 2.154477
AZN 2.015163
BAM 1.96411
BBD 2.406
BDT 145.978881
BGN 2.008696
BHD 0.450889
BIF 3552.419669
BMD 1.196101
BND 1.512952
BOB 8.254824
BRL 6.269397
BSD 1.194564
BTN 109.571071
BWP 15.722657
BYN 3.403917
BYR 23443.577612
BZD 2.402586
CAD 1.62943
CDF 2637.402216
CHF 0.917045
CLF 0.026139
CLP 1032.007751
CNY 8.318104
CNH 8.30887
COP 4410.885206
CRC 593.516226
CUC 1.196101
CUP 31.696674
CVE 110.734461
CZK 24.26207
DJF 212.72831
DKK 7.467731
DOP 75.158637
DZD 154.280296
EGP 56.23687
ERN 17.941513
ETB 185.732536
FJD 2.636984
FKP 0.873322
GBP 0.867795
GEL 3.217131
GGP 0.873322
GHS 13.079396
GIP 0.873322
GMD 87.314699
GNF 10465.882724
GTQ 9.165859
GYD 249.925386
HKD 9.33
HNL 31.525654
HRK 7.546322
HTG 156.664182
HUF 379.471408
IDR 19978.473309
ILS 3.715777
IMP 0.873322
INR 109.514819
IQD 1564.934578
IRR 50385.750541
ISK 145.194819
JEP 0.873322
JMD 187.684122
JOD 0.848074
JPY 183.005807
KES 154.105723
KGS 104.597859
KHR 4803.444638
KMF 499.367593
KPW 1076.514027
KRW 1719.161836
KWD 0.366364
KYD 0.995512
KZT 601.828953
LAK 25739.801713
LBP 106974.384583
LKR 369.898192
LRD 220.992283
LSL 19.156012
LTL 3.531775
LVL 0.723509
LYD 7.539934
MAD 10.848593
MDL 20.141221
MGA 5362.735446
MKD 61.747587
MMK 2511.870941
MNT 4264.260501
MOP 9.598995
MRU 47.724328
MUR 54.446697
MVR 18.491482
MWK 2071.429923
MXN 20.658917
MYR 4.727584
MZN 76.251258
NAD 19.155932
NGN 1684.182416
NIO 43.956354
NOK 11.532817
NPR 175.314249
NZD 1.990868
OMR 0.459896
PAB 1.194544
PEN 4.003975
PGK 5.110688
PHP 70.520926
PKR 334.458746
PLN 4.198733
PYG 8006.945639
QAR 4.342775
RON 5.098738
RSD 117.40807
RUB 91.360275
RWF 1742.874387
SAR 4.485741
SBD 9.665653
SCR 16.205658
SDG 719.44787
SEK 10.556374
SGD 1.510957
SHP 0.897385
SLE 29.172603
SLL 25081.636916
SOS 681.48919
SRD 45.807084
STD 24756.873682
STN 24.604311
SVC 10.452269
SYP 13228.36747
SZL 19.150188
THB 37.179008
TJS 11.157462
TMT 4.198314
TND 3.444603
TOP 2.879924
TRY 51.916496
TTD 8.12344
TWD 37.558821
TZS 3055.10961
UAH 51.278611
UGX 4265.081918
USD 1.196101
UYU 44.759384
UZS 14453.275008
VES 428.457265
VND 31258.900883
VUV 143.229868
WST 3.26451
XAF 658.760848
XAG 0.011231
XAU 0.000236
XCD 3.232523
XCG 2.152927
XDR 0.821429
XOF 658.749786
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.240356
ZAR 19.119469
ZMK 10766.344184
ZMW 23.586503
ZWL 385.144001
  • CMSC

    -0.0442

    23.7354

    -0.19%

  • BCC

    -1.5160

    81.884

    -1.85%

  • CMSD

    -0.0570

    24.103

    -0.24%

  • RIO

    2.1620

    92.632

    +2.33%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    -0.8300

    82.4

    -1.01%

  • BCE

    0.3500

    25.5

    +1.37%

  • NGG

    1.7000

    84.28

    +2.02%

  • JRI

    0.0080

    13.738

    +0.06%

  • BTI

    0.8800

    59.87

    +1.47%

  • GSK

    0.9750

    51.295

    +1.9%

  • RELX

    -1.7150

    37.795

    -4.54%

  • AZN

    1.6300

    95.86

    +1.7%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    17.15

    +0.87%

  • BP

    0.6550

    37.415

    +1.75%

  • VOD

    0.2600

    14.49

    +1.79%

S.Africa clinic hopes to save penguins' future
S.Africa clinic hopes to save penguins' future / Photo: MARCO LONGARI - AFP

S.Africa clinic hopes to save penguins' future

A small fish is dangled under the beak of an emaciated penguin at a South African clinic, to whet the bird's appetite.

Text size:

The sickly animal is among dozens undergoing treatment in the coastal town of Gqeberha, where a dedicated rehabilitation centre is on a mission to bring African penguins back from the brink of extinction.

"We are trying to reverse some of the human damage caused to these birds over the years," says Caitlin van der Merwe, a seabird ranger at the Southern African Foundation for the Conservation of Coastal Birds (SANCCOB).

Threatened by climate change and human activity, the endangered species, which waddles awkwardly on land but turns into a fast-swimming torpedo in the water, has suffered a drastic decline in numbers.

Around 50,000 mating pairs -- penguins are monogamous -- inhabited the shorelines of South Africa and Namibia three decades ago. Today the number has dropped to 10,000 pairs.

That's a jaw-dropping 80 percent population decrease, which zoologists say is even more worrying given that a healthy penguin population is considered indicative of a healthy marine ecosystem.

"The species declining, that means there's a big issue in the marine environment," says Carl Havemann, who heads the penguin clinic.

- Climate threat -

The centre is currently teeming with feathered patients.

Over the past two weeks, about 40 baby penguins have been transferred here from Bird Island, an islet home to one of Africa's largest penguin colonies about 60 kilometres off Gqeberha, formerly known as Port Elizabeth.

Heavy rains have battered the island, washing away nests and chicks.

The little black and white birds traditionally dug their nests into a thick layer of guano - a mixture of droppings and remains that accumulate over time.

But the organic substance has been plundered for use as natural fertiliser, and the penguins now have to make do with branches or in cracks in the rocks, which make for a less sturdy home.

And for the first three months of their lives the birds are covered only by grey plumage that offers little protection from water and cold.

The rains caused many to drown or die of hypothermia.

"With climate change, weather events are becoming more and more extreme and these obviously impact the natural colonies," Havemann says.

- Footbath -

Some survivors are being treated in the seabird rehabilitation centre's intensive care unit, where staff are busy disinfecting, stitching and bandaging wounds.

Footbaths, sardines and medicines are also part of the treatment.

In total, around 100 birds, both young and adult, are cared for in the clinic.

The goal is to return them to the wild in the shortest time possible, limiting interaction with humans to what is strictly necessary.

The penguins huddle together, their shoulders raised as if they are perennially cold.

Some are kept hydrated through a small tube inserted in their gullets. Desperate ones are euthanised.

For those who are fit enough, rehab continues in the pool.

"If they don't swim, they don't drink," says van der Merwe, as she whispers soothing words to a small penguin furiously waving its wings while she holds it between her thighs.

It is suffering from borreliosis, an infectious disease caused by bacteria, and needs antibiotics.

Besides extreme weather events, African penguins are also threatened by diseases, overfishing and pollution.

Gqeberha is home to a major port and huge cargo ships refuel offshore.

Spills in the recent past have seen frantic attempts to rescue and clean up oil-tarred penguins.

At current rates of decline, African penguins could become extinct within a decade, according to the Environment Ministry.

"The ocean has such a complexity. If we take bits here and there, the whole system will collapse," van der Merwe says.

(P.Werner--BBZ)