Sunday, January 18, 2009

Sight for Ajani, the African Penguin

Video Courtesy of KSL.com



Out-of-town penguin gets eye surgery in Salt Lake
January 15th, 2009 @ 4:48pm
By Jed Boal

One veterinary eye doctor in Salt Lake had to come up with her own checklist for surgery when a baby penguin traveled from Idaho Falls for a first-of-its-kind operation today.

Ajani is 14 weeks old. Until a couple of hours ago, the African black-footed penguin could not see. Now he can get a good look at his friends for the first time; and when it comes to fishing, you can bet his skills will be much improved.

"I'm of course nervous for him, but excited for him. He obviously wants to be part of the flock," said zookeeper Amy Vargas.

Just a couple hours earlier, Ajani was put under and prepped for cataract surgery on both eyes. The cloudy vision was a birth defect for the baby penguin, which lives with this family of 23 at the Tautphaus Park Zoo in Idaho Falls.



















"It's progressively gotten worse, so the lens in his eye, which is behind his iris, has become cloudy. So, he's not getting any light to his retina," explained veterinary ophthalmologist Dr. Nicole McLaren.

MacLaren donated her time for the surgery at Salt Lake City Eye Care for Animals. She's worked on a lot of eyes -- eagles and owls -- but never a baby penguin. "Our job is to do the best we can to provide him an excellent quality of life so he interacts with all the other birds and is able to feed himself and be self-sufficient," she said.

Among the challenges in this surgery are that the eyeballs are so tiny, and they have bones in them. "So, this eye is fixed in place, and his pupil is extremely small, so we're going to have a few challenges in this one," MacLaren explained during the surgery.



















They describe Ajani as a sweet bird. He even helps the zoo educate children and adults about the importance of habitat preservation. "It's very exciting for him to be able to see so that he can join the rest of the gang," Vargas said.

The zoo in Idaho Falls has been exhibiting penguins for 11 years, and it successfully raised eight penguin chicks in 2008. Among 17 penguin species, the African black-footed penguin is the only African penguin.

Story and pictures courtesy of KSL News@
http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=5328229

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Surgery gives penguin first views


By Lynn Arave

Deseret News

Published: Thursday, Jan. 15, 2009 10:00 p.m. MST

Ajani doesn't just have happy feet, he has happy eyes now, too.

That's because the 14-week-old African black-footed penguin, blind since birth due to cataracts, was able to see for the first time Thursday.

Nicole MacLaren, a veterinary ophthalmologist at Eye Care for Animals in Salt Lake City, performed successful bilateral cataract surgery on the penguin, a resident of the Tautphaus Park Zoo in Idaho Falls.

"It went very well," MacLaren said of the surgery. It took only about 10 to 15 minutes per eye, but she noted that with animals it takes much longer for preparation and anesthesia.

























How soon did the penguin know he could see?

"We dangled some string in front of him and he bit at it," MacLaren said.

MacLaren said she donated her time for the operation because zoos are almost always short of funding for such services.

The Tautphaus Park Zoo has been exhibiting penguins for 11 years and participates in the Association of Zoos and Aquariums African Penguin Species Survival Plan. It successfully raised eight penguin chicks in 2008. Ajani came to Utah because Eye Care for Animals is the nearest surgery center to his home.























The zoo is Idaho's largest with more than 350 animals, including wallaby, snow leopards, lemurs, tamarins and amur tigers.

MacLaren said animal eye surgery is very rewarding. "It's fabulous because you see instant results." She also does frequent surgeries on dogs with cataracts, typically due to diabetes complications.

Story and Images courtesy of Deseret News@
http://deseretnews.com/article/1,5143,705277959,00.html

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