Friday 23 September 2016

Facts About the Royal Penguin



Royal penguins, Macquarie Island - Image Author: M. Murphy - Public Domain



The Royal penguin  (Eudyptes schlegeli) breeds on Macquarie Island and the Bishop and Clerk Islands, roughly equidistance between Antarctica, Australia and New Zealand. They form very large, crowded colonies on slopes covered by rough tufts of grass and loose stones.  The largest colony is on Macquarie Island at Hurd Point with an estimated population of 500,000 pairs out of a total world population of 850,000 pairs in 1984-85. There are estimated to be 1,000 pairs on the Bishop and Clerk Islets.  They were once regarded as a subspecies of the Macaroni penguin but today many scientists consider them a separate species in their own right. They are related to the Macaronis and their breeding territories often overlap.  Like the Macaroni penguin, Royals are members of the crested penguins, or genus Eudyptes. Other members of this group are Fiordland, Snares, Erect-crested, and Rockhopper penguins.


Description


Royals do look similar to Macaroni penguins but are a little smaller. The faces of Macaroni penguins are mostly black while Macaronis have mainly white faces with white chins.  Royal penguins can grow to about 28 inches tall and weigh up to 13 pounds. They are not as large as Yellow-eyed, King or Emperor penguins but considerably larger than Little Blue penguins.

Hunting and Diet

 

The Royal penguin’s diet consists mainly of krill, squid and fish caught using pursuit diving at depths of between 50-150 feet. Their dives will not usually last longer than 2 minutes. They are strong, fast swimmers and their webbed feet and flippers power them through the water at up to 20 miles per hour.

Breeding

 

The Royals breed in a synchronized cycle beginning when the males arrive on Macquarie Island to claim nesting sites in late September. The females arrive later in October.

Nests are often scratched out hollows lined with pebble or vegetation in the scree and grass tufts on slopes by the shore where the female lays 2 eggs. Typically with the crested penguin group the first egg will be neglected and not hatch. It usually takes around 30 days to hatch the second egg.

For the next 3 to 4 weeks it is the task of the male to guard the chick until it has grown big enough to form nursery groups with other chicks. These then huddle together for warmth and security while both parents hunt at sea. About late February the chicks fledge, loosing their down and growing adult plumage. They are then ready to hunt in the sea on their own.  Around May after the adults have moulted they will leave Macquarie Island for the open sea roaming the southern ocean between Tasmania and Antarctica until the next breeding cycle.

Threats and Predators

 

For many years Royal penguins were hunted by humans for their oil but now they are protected. Nevertheless they still suffer from human activity such as over fishing and oil spills.  In the sea they are prey to sharks and seals while on land skuas steal eggs and kill chicks. Human introduced species have caused havoc on Macquarie Island which was not helped by further human interference.  On Macquarie Island cats had previously kept the rabbit and rodent population under control though they also preyed on penguins. When cats were removed from the island the population of rabbits multiplied causing so much damage to plant life it could be seen from space. Now the Australian government plans to remove rats, mice, and rabbits from the island.  The International Union for Conservation of Nature have listed Royals as Vulnerable (VU D2) on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species and regarded as having a high risk of extinction in the wild.

References, Attributions and Further Reading

 


MarineBio Conservation Society - Royal Penguins, (Eudyptes schlegeli)

Royal Penguin from Wikipedia



Facts about the Adelie Penguin



The Adelie penguin (Pygoscelis Adeliae) is the most common of all the Antarctica species of penguin.  They are also the most widely distributed species in the region with estimates showing around 2.5 million pairs may be making their homes in colonies around the Antarctica coast.




  Adelie penguins, feeding




Description

 

Standing about 30 inches tall fully grown and weighing 11 pounds’ Adelies are the smallest penguin species on the Antarctica continent. Adelies along with the Gentoo and Chinstrap are one of the brush-tailed species of penguin. They have long tail feather that trail behind when they walk.
Their heads are black with a white ring around the eyes. Black feathers cover most of their short bill which is reddish with a black tip. Their fronts are white and their backs are black. They have often been seen on the snow and ice getting about toboggan style by sliding down hills on their bellies.
Adelies are powerful swimmers and hunt fish and krill moving like torpedoes through the water. Although they can dive up to 500 feet in search of prey, most hunting is done much nearer the surface. They can often be seen jumping straight out of the sea on to land.


Ancestral Breeding Grounds 

 

During winter Adelies stay in groups at sea on icebergs and pack ice. During September and October they head for their breeding grounds to trek several miles over sea ice to their ancestral breeding grounds.  These are typically ice free slopes on headlands, rocky coasts and islands where Adelies form dense raucous breeding colonies. There is fierce competition for the best nesting sites.  These are situated in the centre of the colony and offer greater protection from predators and the elements. Usually it is the older’ more experienced and dominant pairs that win these. 


Nesting

 
Adelies make circular nests on high, well drained sites using pebbles and stones. They will fight each other for building materials, often stealing it from neighbouring nests.
The female lays two eggs around early November. Both male and female Adelies incubate the eggs in turns. While one goes hunting in the sea the other will stay and keep the eggs warm and safe from predators. It usually takes about 35 days for the eggs to hatch, which often happens at about the same time.  The chicks will then be closely nurtured for the next two to three weeks. The parents bring the chicks food which is regurgitated for them. It is not unusual for one chick to be stronger than its sibling winning more food. The chicks grow quickly developing a grey layer of warm down soon becoming nearly as big as their parents. 


Penguin Crèche

 
When they have grown big enough, usually around the third or fourth week, the chicks will join others in nursery, or crèche groups. The chicks huddle together for warmth and protection while their parents are out hunting in the sea.  The parents are kept busy on these feeding trips and they spend much time back and forth to the sea trying to satisfy the chick’s voracious appetites. By the end of March most of the chicks are capable of swimming and the Adelies then return to the sea and pack ice. 


Predators 

 
On land their main predators are skuas and other birds that steal the eggs and kill their chicks. In the sea their main enemy is the leopard seal which lies in ambush for unwary penguins as they enter the water.


References, Attributions and Further Reading 


Antarctic Connection
Adélie Penguin  From Wikipedia 
Image - File:Antarctic, adelie penguins (js) 22.jpg From Wikimedia Commons - Antarctica, Adelie penguins, feeding - Image Author - Jerzy Strzelecki - Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license