Wednesday, July 17, 2013

For Baltimore zoo and its penguins, a new era is at hand

New $10.4 million exhibit is underway to revive zoo, boost breeding of endangered birds


The Maryland Zoo in Baltimore is investing millions of dollars to build a new African penguin exhibit, in part to continue its efforts at breeding the species.



As a blazing sun beat down on the city Tuesday, Rock Island — the moated exhibit at the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore where African penguins zip through cool, shallow waters — seemed a good place to be.

But the Druid Hill Park enclosure is nothing compared to the new digs planned for the zoo's prized colony of endangered birds.

In a move to further enhance what is already considered one of North America's most robust breeding grounds for African penguins, zoo officials started construction this week on a $10.4 million, 1.5-acre exhibit for the birds to call home.

Officials see the project, funded largely in recent years by consecutive state allocations of about $9 million, not only as a major investment in the future of the species but also as the first step in a "broad vision" to transform the nation's third-oldest zoo into one of its most modern.
"We think that this exhibit will redefine the zoo," said Don Hutchinson, the zoo's president and CEO. "People love penguins."

The black-and-white birds, each about 7 or 8 pounds, are quick and active, inclined to pull the shoelaces loose on a keeper's shoes as they waddle around their enclosure.
"They definitely have their own personality," said Jen Kottyan, a former keeper who is now the zoo's avian collection manager.

The African penguin population in the wild, native to the coasts and islands of South Africa and Namibia, has been decimated during the last century by human consumption of their eggs, overfishing, coastal industry and oil spills.

The species' decline has escalated in recent years, according to Dyan deNapoli, a former penguin aquarist at the New England Aquarium in Boston who participated in a massive rescue of the birds in South Africa after an oil spill in 2000.

The wild population has dwindled from 165,000 in 2000 to an estimated 25,000 now, says deNapoli, who wrote a book about her rescue experiences and now lectures across the country about the species' plight.

The birds, now endangered, are the subject of intensive captive breeding efforts.
"The idea is, if we had to repopulate the wild, we're making sure that in the captive populations, we're maintaining extremely diverse genetics," deNapoli said.

Officials at the Maryland Zoo — which has had African penguins for a half-century — say their program is the single most successful breeding facility in North America, with nearly 1,000 chicks bred to date.

Kottyan says every African penguin colony in the country has some connection to Baltimore's bird colony.

Such signature programs define zoos in the broader zoological community, Hutchinson and others say. With the new, year-round exhibit underway, the zoo is poised to highlight in style what is already its crowning achievement.

The current 2,000-square-foot exhibit, a large structure of rocks that conceal a building surrounded by a concrete walkway and a broad moat, was built in the 1950s for mountain goats. It also housed chimpanzees before it was converted for penguins in the 1960s.

Today, its age is apparent, though the birds seem happy enough, as their breeding indicates.
The only access to the island is through a long tunnel that smells faintly of fish. The moat, which holds about 200,000 gallons of water, has no filtration system and must be drained and scrubbed clean once a week.

The planned 10,500-square-foot facility, which zoo officials want to open to the public in October 2014, will have a state-of-the-art filtration system that officials say will save about 7 million gallons of water per year.

And visitors will have more opportunities to see the birds waddle around on land and dart through the water — just as they were born to do off the coast of Africa.

"It's going to be fun," said Jess Phillips, manager of Rock Island and its surroundings at the zoo.
Hutchinson says tiers and tunnels and indoor and outdoor spaces will give visitors unprecedented views of the penguins.

"The viewers are going to be able to see them from every angle possible," he said.

Officials say the larger space also will allow the zoo to double the current population of about 50 birds. They say breeding efforts based on a population of 100 birds will vastly increase the colony's value to the global African penguin population by increasing its ability to establish diverse genetic lines.

City tourism officials also believe the new facility will boost attendance at the zoo, drawing in people from the Baltimore area and beyond.

"The zoo has a real opportunity to drive additional visitation," said Tom Noonan, president and CEO of Visit Baltimore. "By doubling the number of penguins and adding opportunities for visitors to engage and immerse themselves in the penguin habitat, the zoo is in a great position to be the destination to visit for African penguins on the East Coast."

Baltimore-based construction and contracting company Whiting-Turner is already at work.
Hutchinson says he sees the exhibit bringing the zoo back to its heyday in the 1950s as a favorite destination for city residents, students and travelers to Baltimore, like the National Aquarium in the Inner Harbor.

"It firms up our place in the national zoo community," he said. "It gives us the opportunity to be one of those zoos that's taking the next step."
 
African penguin exhibit
The Maryland Zoo in Baltimore's new $10.4 million, 1.5-acre exhibit for African penguins is expected to open to the public in October 2014. The 10,500-square-foot facility will allow the zoo, which currently has space for about 50 penguins, to double the population. It will have a state-of-the-art filtration system, saving about 7 million gallons of water a year. Tiers and tunnels and indoor and outdoor spaces will give visitors unprecedented views of the penguins.

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