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Penguin Lost In New Zealand Faces A Long Swim Home

06/29/11 01:01 PM ET   AP

WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A young emperor penguin won't be getting a free ride all the way back to its Antarctic home, but its human friends in New Zealand will help it get a little closer.

The penguin is recovering well at Wellington Zoo, where it underwent a medical procedure on Monday to flush out much of the beach sand it swallowed, apparently mistaking it for snow.

It may need a few months to recover, but wildlife officials have been trying to figure out how the 3-foot (80 centimeter) -tall bird will return home. Transporting it to Antarctica is near-impossible in the southern winter, and there are fears the penguin may have acquired infections in the warmer New Zealand environment that could spread to other penguins.

On Wednesday, an advisory group headed by the Department of Conservation decided officials will help the penguin get part of the way home by releasing it into the Southern Ocean, southeast of New Zealand – and letting it swim the rest of the way.

"The reason for not returning the penguin directly to Antarctica is that emperor penguins of this age are usually found north of Antarctica on pack ice and in the open ocean," the department's biodiversity spokesman Peter Simpson said.

The bird is estimated at about 2 1/2 years old, a juvenile in a species that reaches breeding age around 4 or 5. It will be released on the northern edge of the region where young emperor penguins are known to live. Simpson said he was unsure how far the penguin would have to swim before reaching its final destination.

The logistics for the trip haven't been set, and the penguin won't be released until it has recovered, which may be months. Until then, it will remain at the zoo.

The penguin – affectionately dubbed Happy Feet – drew intense interest after being spotted June 20 on North Island's Peka Peka Beach, about 2,000 miles (3,200 kilometers) from the Antarctic coast. It was the first emperor spotted in the wild in New Zealand in 44 years.

The bird appears to be doing well Wednesday and is isolated in an air-conditioned room filled with large blocks of ice, zoo spokeswoman Kate Baker said.

After an edoscopy was performed Monday, X-rays show the rest of the sand the penguin ate was passing naturally, she said. It's also been more active and eating fish, zoo officials have said.

"The plan from now on is to let him rest, feed him and X-ray him again on Friday or Saturday to see how much sand has passed," Baker said.

Happy Feet's gender hasn't been confirmed, which requires a DNA test.

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WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A young emperor penguin won't be getting a free ride all the way back to its Antarctic home, but its human friends in New Zealand will help it get a little closer. The...
WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A young emperor penguin won't be getting a free ride all the way back to its Antarctic home, but its human friends in New Zealand will help it get a little closer. The...
WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A young emperor penguin won't be getting a free ride all the way back to its Antarctic home, but its human friends in New Zealand will help it get a little closer. The...
WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A young emperor penguin won't be getting a free ride all the way back to its Antarctic home, but its human friends in New Zealand will help it get a little closer. The...
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04:57 PM on 06/30/2011
Somebody contact his embassy : (
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AC Fraser
bend before you break
06:28 PM on 06/29/2011
I hope someone hooks the little guy up with a TomTom. His navigational skills seems slightly sub-rate.
10:48 PM on 07/01/2011
He does seem a bit "directionally challenged." Hope they microchip him to see how long it takes for him to land on the New Zealand beaches again.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kelly Hayes
This is what plutocracy looks like.
06:04 PM on 06/29/2011
I dislike this plan.
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Mattie
My Daddy taught me to beware the good Christian
09:26 PM on 06/30/2011
I have to agree, it sounds like certain death.
05:45 PM on 06/29/2011
WHY CAN'T THEY JUST LET HIM STAY THERE ? AND WHAT'S WITH ALL THE ICE IS IT NOT SUMMER IN ANTARCTICA ? MAYBE HE SWAM THERE ON PURPOSE " HAPPY FEET " DID ????
04:37 PM on 06/29/2011
He probably turned up in New Zealand because ocean currents have changed -- a result of global climate change -- a fault of humans. Now humans want to put him somewhere in the open ocean (near the edge of penguin habitat) with no idea if he/she will be in helpful currents or face danger from predators or have food to eat. Poor thing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Max Shaw
My micro-bio is no longer empty.
03:54 PM on 06/29/2011
Hope a shark doesnt get him on the way back. Thats a long way to travel by oneself...especially a tasty penguin in open water with nowhere to hide.
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getsit
good morning, I'm here
03:26 PM on 06/29/2011
What's the difference in taking this penguin all the way or letting him swim there? Disease wise there isn't much difference.

Won't someone heading in his direction give him a ride?
cdnman
Still a free spirit...
04:10 PM on 06/29/2011
Would it not be safer to keep him in the zoo? Maybe the zoo isn't equipped for it though.
11:04 PM on 07/01/2011
I read a Yahoo NZ article saying that there could be legal problems with taking him all the way back to Antarctica. Apparently, Antarctica is sort of an international nature preserve, "owned" by several different countries. So before the NZ wildlife officials could take him back there, they'd have to get permission from all of the other parties, making their case for the benefits and risks. The risks, of course, include the possibility that he could infect the other penquins with some warm-water disease or parasite, so the other countries might not agree to the drop-off. Dropping him off in international (or New Zealand) waters allows NZ to bypass this bureaucratic process.
Additionally, it's winter in Antarctica, so the only penguins on land are the ones who are going through the bitter-cold breeding process described in "March of the Penquins." Younger penquins stay out in the open water, away from the ice shelf, partly because the fishing is better out there, and partly because staying near the ice shelf would make them more vulnerable to the Leopard Seals, who eat penguins.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stanschurman
01:17 PM on 06/29/2011
If they are to release it at the edge of where other Emperor penguins gather, I'd assume they'd try to locate a group of such penguins before releasing Happy Feet. BTW, why didn't they name him Sandy?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mamasilverhair
,egalitarian, humanitarian,believer
01:11 PM on 06/29/2011
Poor happy feet...
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people don't taste good.
11:46 AM on 06/29/2011
fear that it could transmit infections......

Do they know what infections or are they just guessing and if they do know is there an antibiotic they could try?
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TggerJen
Protect at snowleopard.org
12:32 PM on 06/29/2011
Good questions. I wish the story had more info about that!
11:23 PM on 07/01/2011
They have to keep him in captivity for a couple of months anyway to fatten him up before returning him to cold water. It seems that they could use that time to keep an eye on his health, examine his droppings for signs of parasites, etc., to make sure that he's relatively healthy before releasing him near the rest of the Antarctic penquin flock.
11:44 AM on 06/29/2011
LOL! "experts aren't sure if it's a male of a female."

then i would say they're not experts.
12:25 PM on 06/29/2011
Unlike the TSA they aren't just going to feel up the Penguin to find out!
RJB Boston
Candor vendor
01:29 PM on 06/29/2011
Haha. Good one.
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getsit
good morning, I'm here
03:28 PM on 06/29/2011
I take it you don't want to be a baby chicken sexer then?
11:17 PM on 07/01/2011
It's now Friday -- seems like those DNA tests should be coming back pretty soon, so we can find out whether Happy Feet is a "he" or a "she."
I'm guessing it's a male. A female would have stopped and asked for directions before traveling two thousand miles in the wrong direction. :-)