Mashudu Mashau says it takes about two minutes to catch a penguin, a task he does weekly to investigate sightings of injured or sickly seabirds.
“We don’t rush... we go down, sometimes we crawl, so that we don’t look threatening, and when we’re close, we aim for the head, hold it and secure the penguin,” the 41-year-old ranger said.
Sometimes, when penguins waddle up from South Africa’s coastline onto nearby streets and hide under cars, it is more of a struggle.
“We had one today. They’re not easy to catch because they go from one side to the other side (of the car), but we got it,” said Mashau, who has dedicated the past eight years to working to protect the species.
Once caught and placed with care into a cardboard box, the small feathered animals are sent to a specialist hospital for treatment.
But conservationists and veterinarians are worried their efforts aren’t sufficient to stop the decline of the African Penguin, listed as critically endangered last month by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
“No matter how much we do, if there isn’t a healthy environment for them, our work is in vain,” said veterinarian David Roberts, who works at the Southern African Foundation for the Conservation of Coastal Birds (SANCCOB) hospital. Fewer than 10,000 breeding pairs are left globally, mainly in South Africa, down from 42,500 in 1991, and they could become extinct in the wild by 2035, the BirdLife NGO says.
The dwindling numbers are due to a combination of factors including a lack of food, climate change, disturbances, predators, disease, oil spills and more. But the biggest threat is nutrition, says Allison Kock, a marine biologist with the South African National Parks.
“So many of the penguins are starving and are not getting enough food to breed successfully,” she said. When penguins do not eat enough, preferably sardines or anchovies, they tend to abandon breeding.
Authorities have imposed a commercial fishing ban around six penguin colonies for 10 years starting in January.
But SANCCOB and BirdLife say the no-fishing zones are not large enough to have a significant impact, and have sued the environment minister over the issue. — AFP
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