The runaway emperor penguin was seen attempting belly slides on the sands of an Australian beach. An emperor penguin has been discovered waddling on an beach, about 3,500 kilometres from its Antarctic home, according to a statement from the Western Australian state’s government. Though Australia is known for its exotic array of animals - and there is a colony of 30cm high 'little penguins' in St Kilda, Melbourne - this is the first known sighting of an in the country.
Emperor penguins are the tallest and heaviest of all living penguins and are usually found only in the Antarctic. The adult male emperor penguin - affectionately nicknamed Gus - was discovered on 1 November by a surfer at a popular tourist beach in Denmark, southwest Australia. University of Western Australia research fellow Belinda Cannell explains that emperor penguins have previously reached , Australia’s neighbour, but that she had “no idea” why Gus travelled to Denmark.
But Dee Boersma, professor of biology at the University of Washington and author of Penguins: Natural History and Conservation, told the New York Times that penguins move about in search of food, which was likely Gus’s primary motivation. “That crazy young penguin,” she added to the New York Times. And may have driven this particular penguin far from home.
Cannell is advising seabird rehabilitator Carol Biddulph, who is caring for Gus, spraying him with a chilled water mist to help him cope with his alien climate. Gus is showing signs of malnourishment: at one metre tall, he weighs in at only 23kg. A can usually weigh more than 45kg.
The Western Australia Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions says its current focus is on rehabilitation, but that options to return Gus to his Antarctic home are “still being worked through”..
Environment
‘Crazy young penguin’ travels to Australia from Antarctica. Is climate change to blame?
‘Crazy young penguin’ travels to Australia from Antarctica. Is climate change to blame?