Thursday, 8 November 2018

Bird is the word - meet the everyday Kiwis saving feathered lives



Vicki Anderson 05:00, Oct 29 2018

Little blue penguins are starving to death. The Kuaotunu Bird Rescue centre has had about 60 brought in, but only three have survived.

Promiscuous penguins terrified of water, harried harrier hawks, clumsy kererÅ« and greedy kea owe their lives to the growing cavalry of everyday Kiwis who are helping rehabilitate our injured wildlife, writes VICKI ANDERSON.

Tubby, 21, is lying sprawled on his bed with his new girlfriend.

For three days straight, his mate next door, Nick Bond, with his distinctive swaggering walk, has been curled up beside one of his four current love interests, only emerging to eat.

"Penguins have lots of sexually transmitted diseases, they're very promiscuous," says Dianne Hynes, head penguin keeper at the International Antarctic Centre in Christchurch.

The centre is home to little blue and white-flippered penguins, the latter a unique "Canterbury only penguin" with a distinctive extra stripe around its flipper.

"It's breeding season at the moment," Hynes says. "So they're bonking away like crazy. We don't breed them because we are a second chance welfare centre, but they are still going for it."

Penguins have sex up to 50 times a day and "poo constantly".

"Nick Bond is our most handsome penguin. A surfer found him at Leithfield Beach," Hynes says. "A shark got one of his feet and he has toes missing on his other foot so when he walks he has got a bit of a swagger.




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