Oamaru’s Underpass for March of the Penguins

A group of Little Blue Penguins have had their own underpass built between their nests and the sea at Oamaru Harbour to protect them from traffic and give them privacy from tourists keen to take pictures.

The Little Blue Penguins are members of the world’s smallest penguin species, typically about 30cm tall and weighing around 1kg.

“The project was supported by the local Waitaki district council, as well as a number of private businesses who offered labour, materials, and advice,” general manager of Tourism Waitaki Limited Jason Gaskill said.

The 25m-tunnel will accommodate the one or two dozen birds, on average, that used the North Otago Yacht and Power Boat Club boat ramp to come ashore at night, Oamaru Blue Penguin Colony marine biologist Dr Philippa Agnew told the Otago Daily Times.

The penguins were “very habitual’” and not easily dissuaded from using established nesting sites despite the high level of disturbance at the crossing.

Dr Agnew was confident the birds would use the crossing, as the neighbouring colony’s birds had learnt to walk through a hole in a fence where a micro-chip reader was installed to read the ‘”grain of rice”-sized implants some of the birds wore in the back of their necks.

Original article by Reuters, The Guardian, November 11, 2016.


Tags: Guardian (The)  Little Blue Penguins  Oamaru Blue Penguin Colony  Otago Daily Times  Waitaki District Council  

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