This
was described by Kevin Hester in his discussion with Guy McPherson on
NBL.
Of course the contention that the mass die-off could be a "one-in-20-year event that could partly be blamed on this summer's La Niña weather pattern" should be treated with the contempt it deserves.
Hundreds
of blue penguins die off, starved by La Niña
Hundreds
- potentially thousands - of little blue penguins have washed up dead
on beaches along the east coast of the upper North Island in recent
months.
11
April, 2018
The
Department of Conservation said the mass die-off could be a
one-in-20-year event that could partly be
blamed on this summer's La Niña weather pattern.
Western
Bay Wildlife Trust chairperson Julia Graham said it had received
about 60 calls over the last two weeks about penguins that had washed
up dead, or had died not long after they arrived on and.
Warmer
ocean temperatures had meant there was a lack of food, or their food
sources had changed, Ms Graham said.
The
penguins were also trying to come ashore to moult at this time of
year and if they didn't have enough fat reserves, they might not
survive the two or three week process.
"They
are coming out of it very, very weak and starving and then a
combination of cyclones, offshore storms and bad weather has meant
that they just don't have the energy to find food and fight the rough
oceans anymore," Ms Graham said.
"By
the time they're washing up, they're pretty far gone, they're
emaciated, starving, no food, very, very exhausted."
Graeme
Taylor from the Department of Conservation said they had had reports
of penguins being washed up dead along the east coast of the upper
North island, from the Bay of Plenty northwards.
A
little blue penguin Photo: Supplied / Western Bay Wildlife
Trust
This
sort of mass die-off event happened once or twice every decade in
moderate numbers, and once every 20 years in very large numbers.
"I
think this may be the one-in-20-year cycle," Mr Taylor said.
"The
last really big die-off occurred in 1998, when about 3500 penguins
washed up on beaches. The sort of numbers we're hearing about could
indicate we're up around that several thousand range."
But,
Mr Taylor said, they were natural events.
"When
birds have been checked in the past, they've all found to be dying
from starvation, rather than from diseases or some other more
worrying thing that could be causing mortality," he said.
People
who find the little blue penguins on beaches are being told to leave
them alone, unless they are obviously injured. Dogs should also be
kept on leashes and under control.
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