Showing posts with label penguin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label penguin. Show all posts

Thursday, 28 June 2012

Runaway penguin 'No 337' to be named in Japan


A penguin whose break-out from an aquarium in Japan gave him a following around the world is to be formally named after months of being known just by his number, an official said Monday.
Humboldt penguin No. 337 spent 82 days at large in and around Tokyo Bay after bolting his enclosure, evading aquarium staff, an army of public onlookers and even Japan's well-equipped coastguard.
But until his recapture last month and subsequent thorough medical check-up, keepers did not even know what gender the plucky escapee was, and had insisted he did not have a name.
Now officials at Tokyo Sea Life Park have launched a competition asking visitors to think of what the bird should be called.
"We decided to give him a pet name by soliciting ideas and their reasons from visitors," said aquarium official Takashi Sugino.
"This is a special treatment to express our gratitude to the public for providing information on the bird, and also for cooperating with us by listening to our call not to try to capture him," he said.
Visitors are being asked to watch the creature -- now safely back in his enclosure -- before putting their suggestion in a box, Sugino said, admitting the aquarium was expecting a spike in numbers.
Nominations opened on June 15 and will end on July 1, said Sugino, adding "a naming committee comprising the aquarium director, the vice director and keepers will pick the most appropriate name."

Monday, 21 May 2012

Japan penguin escapee 'spotted' in Tokyo Bay


A penguin which escaped from Tokyo's Sea Life Park has reportedly been spotted swimming in waters around the Japanese capital.
The one-year-old Humboldt - which fled its enclosure in March - was caught on video near Tokyo's Rainbow Bridge, according to Reuters news agency.
A Sea Life Park official identified it as the escapee, recognising a distinctive ring round a flipper.
"It looks like it's been living quite happily," Kazuhiro Sakamoto said.
"It didn't look like it has got thinner over the last two months - or been without food," he added.
In March, the penguin - known only as No 337 - escaped by scaling a rock wall and a barbed-wire fence, the Tokyo Sea Life Park believes.

Monday, 14 May 2012

Drunk tourists fined for stealing penguin from Australian theme park

Two tourists who drunkenly stole a penguin from an Australian theme park have been fined £650 each (AU $1,000). 


PA reports that the Welsh tourists, 21-year-old Rhys Owen Jones and 20-year-old Keri Mules, plead guilty to trespassing and stealing the animal in a Brisbane court on Wednesday (May 2).


The pair, both from Wales, snuck into the SeaWorld theme park and stole the fairy penguin - named Dirk - on April 14.


They were accompanied by 18-year-old Australian James Vasil, and the trio reportedly drunk one and a half litres of vodka between them at a party prior to entering the park.


Aside from stealing the penguin, the friends also set off a fire extinguisher in a shark enclosure and swam with dolphins, all filmed on their mobile phones. 


A legal representative for both Mules and Jones argued that the men meant no harm, citing that they took care of the stolen penguin later by putting it in the shower and feeding it the day after their escapade. 


Sitting magistrate Brian Kucks said that the pair were lucky not to have stumbled into the polar bear enclosure during their visit to Sea World.


Vasil currently faces a trespassing charge and has had his case adjourned until June 27. 


Watch a Seven Network news report on the story at:http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/odd/news/a379484/drunk-tourists-fined-for-stealing-penguin-from-australian-theme-park.html



Tuesday, 28 February 2012

Big Bird: Fossils of World's Tallest Penguin Discovered

New Zealand was once home to the tallest penguin species ever known — a lanky bird that stood as high as 4.2 feet (1.3 meters).

The penguin, dubbed Kairuku grebneffi, lived about 27 million years ago in a penguin paradise. More of New Zealand was underwater at the time, with only today's mountaintops emerging from the sea. That made for excellent coastal nesting for a number of penguin species.

The new fossil specimens were found beginning in the 1970s, and researchers have continued to turn up bones from the animals as recently as two months ago, said study researcher and North Carolina State University paleontologist Daniel Ksepka. The find expands the known diversity of ancient New Zealand penguins, Ksepka told LiveScience.

"In the past we would have thought there were one or two species living in the area," he said. "Now we know there were five."

Wednesday, 5 October 2011

‘Penguin’ spotted near Portsmouth

Daytrippers on Southsea beach near Portsmouth were astonished to see what appeared to be a lost penguin frolicking in the shallows, it was reported.

The Sun newspaper published grainy footage of a black and white seabird diving in and out of the waves on Sunday, as the south coast enjoyed record October temperatures.
Earlier, the bird is said to have been seen waddling around the harbour to the surprise of onlookers.
The newspaper suggested that it could be a lost jackass penguin, whose natural habitat is 6,000 miles away in South Africa.
The claim of a sighting in the Solent came only a few months after an Antarctic Emperor Penguin nicknamed “happy feet” caused a global sensation when it turned up in New Zealand.

Joanne Gordon, 35, of Aldershot, who shot the footage, told the paper: “I couldn’t believe it when I saw it swimming around away just six foot from me.”

It is the latest in a series of unlikely sightings of exotic visitors off the south coast of England in recent years.

In 2007 The Sun ran a series of stories reporting that a great white shark had been spotted in the area.
It later transpired that the footage at the centre of the scare had been shot near Cape Town.
In August last year there was panic after French officials received reports of a crocodile in the Channel.

Beaches were closed and warnings broadcast by coastguard before it was finally established that the “creature” was a piece of driftwood.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/8806153/Penguin-spotted-near-Portsmouth.html
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