“Gus,” emperor penguin found on Australian beach after swimming from Antarctica, released at sea after 20 days of care
Melbourne, Australia — The only emperor penguin known to have swum from Antarctica to Australia was released at sea 20 days after he waddled ashore on a popular tourist beach, officials said Friday.
The adult male was found on Nov. 1 on Ocean Beach sand dunes in the town of Denmark in temperate southwest Australia – about 2,200 miles north of the icy waters off the Antarctic coast, the Western Australia state government said. He was released from a Parks and Wildlife Service boat on Wednesday.
The boat traveled for several hours from the state’s most southerly city of Albany before the penguin was released into the Southern Ocean, but the government didn’t give the distance in its statement.
He had been cared for by registered wildlife caregiver Carol Biddulph, who named him Gus after the first Roman emperor Augustus.
rising temperature of the oceans and seas across the world. According to The World Wildlife Foundation, about three-quarters of the world’s breeding colonies of emperor penguins are vulnerable to fluctuations in the annual sea ice cover in the Antarctic, which have become far more erratic due to climate change.
The penguins breed and live on sea ice, but the Antarctic Sea ice is disappearing as our planet warms up.
“They show up at the breeding season and the ice isn’t there, so they have nowhere to breed,” Dr. Birgitte McDonald, an ecologist at the Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, which is funded and administered by San Jose State University, told CBS San Francisco last year.
An analysis by scientists at Cambridge University, published last year in the journal Science News, found that “ice in one area was melting especially early in the year,” putting emperor chicks at extreme risk.
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Source: cbsnews.com