WELLINGTON, New Zealand – A young Emperor penguin
took a rare wrong turn from the Antarctic and ended up stranded on a New
Zealand beach — the first time in 44 years the aquatic bird has been
sighted in the wild in the South Pacific country.
Local resident Christine Wilton was taking her
miniature Schnauzer dog Millie for a walk on Peka Peka Beach on the
North Island's western coast when she discovered the bird Monday
evening.
"It was out-of-this-world to see it ... like someone just dropped it from the sky," Wilton said.
"It looked like 'Happy Feet' — it was totally in the
wrong place," Wilton said, referring to the 2006 animated musical
featuring a young penguin who finds himself far from home.
Conservation experts say the penguin is about 10
months old and stands about 32 inches (80 centimeters) high. Colin
Miskelly, a curator at Te Papa, the Museum of New Zealand, said the bird
was likely born during the last Antarctic winter. It may have been
searching for squid and krill when it took a wrong turn.
Emperor penguins are the tallest and largest species
of penguin and can grow up to 4 feet (122 centimeters) high and weigh
more than 75 pounds (34 kilograms).
Their amazing journey to breeding grounds deep in the
Antarctic was chronicled in the 2005 documentary "March of the
Penguins," which highlighted their ability to survive the brutal winter
Miskelly said Emperor penguins can spend months at a
time in the ocean, coming ashore only to molt or rest. He doesn't know
what might have caused this particular one to become disoriented.
Miskelly said the penguin appeared healthy and well-fed, with plenty of
body fat, and probably came ashore for a rest.
However, Miskelly said the penguin would need to find
its way back south soon if it were to survive. Despite the onset of the
New Zealand winter, the bird was probably hot and thirsty, he said, and
it had been eating wet sand.
"It doesn't realize that the sand isn't going to melt
inside it," Miskelly said. "They typically eat snow, because it's their
only liquid."
However, he said the bird was in no immediate danger
from dehydration because Emperor penguins can also drink salt water in
the summer.
Peter Simpson, a program manager for New Zealand's
Department of Conservation, said officials are asking people to stand
back about 30 feet (10 meters) from the creature and to avoid letting
dogs near it.
Other than that, he said, officials plan to let
nature take its course. Simpson said the bird could live several weeks
before needing another meal.
The last confirmed sighting of a wild Emperor in New Zealand was in 1967 at the southern Oreti Beach, Simpson said.
Miskelly, the curator, said the bird appears to weigh
about 22 pounds (10 kilograms) — healthy for its age, but only about
one-third of the weight the penguin would need to reach before it could
survive a breeding cycle on the Antarctic ice.
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