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Humboldt penguin

The Humboldt penguin (Spheniscus humboldti) is a medium-sized penguin. It resides in South America, its range mainly contains most of coastal Peru.[3] Its nearest relatives are the African penguin, the Magellanic penguin and the Galápagos penguin. The Humboldt penguin and the cold water current it swims in both are named after the explorer Alexander von Humboldt. The species is listed as vulnerable by the IUCN with no population recovery plan in place.[4] The current population is composed of 32,000 mature individuals and is going down.[5] It is a migrant species.[5]

Humboldt penguin
At Islas Ballestas, Peru
CITES Appendix I (CITES)[2]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Sphenisciformes
Family: Spheniscidae
Genus: Spheniscus
Species:
S. humboldti
Binomial name
Spheniscus humboldti
Meyen, 1834
Distribution of the Humboldt penguin. 80% of the world's population lives in the protected areas of the Northern Chilean regions III and IV.

Humboldt penguins nest on islands and rocky coasts, burrowing holes in guano and sometimes using scrapes or caves. In South America the Humboldt penguin is found only along the Pacific coast, and the range of the Humboldt penguin overlaps that of the Magellanic penguin on the central Chilean coast. It is vagrant in Ecuador and Colombia.[6] The Humboldt penguin has been known to live in mixed species colonies with the Magellanic penguin in at least two different locations at the south of Chile.[7][8]

The Humboldt penguin has become a focus of ecotourism over the last decades.[9]

Description Edit

Humboldt penguins are medium-sized penguins, growing to 56–70 cm (22–28 in) long and a weight of 2.9 to 6 kg (6.4 to 13.2 lb).[10][11][12] The sex of the Humboldt penguin cannot be recognised via differences in plumage, as they are monomorphic. The male is heavier and larger than the females.[13] Their sex can be determined via head width and bill length; the male has a longer bill than the female.[13] While all the Spheniscus penguins are close to each other in size, the Humboldt penguin is the heaviest species in the genus, with 123 females weighing 4.05 kg (8.9 lb) on average and 165 males averaging 4.7 kg (10 lb).[12] Humboldt penguins have a black head with a white border that runs from behind the eye, around the black ear-coverts and chin, and joins at the throat. They have blackish-grey upperparts and whitish underparts, with a black breast-band that extends down the flanks to the thigh. They have a fleshy-pink base to the bill. Juveniles have dark heads and no breast-band. They have spines on their tongue which they use to hold their prey.[14]

Vocalisation Edit

The Humboldt penguin has different calls that it uses to communicate in different ways. The function of its calls are consistent among Spheniscus species. If an individual comes too close to an adult Humboldt penguin, the Yell is a warning call which is followed by pecking or chasing if ignored.[15] A higher density of penguins leads to more territorial and aggressive behaviours, which leads to more Yells.[15] The Throb is a soft call between pairs at the nest, used by incubating birds when their mates return to the nest.[15] The Haw is a short call given by juveniles alone in the water and by paired birds when one is on the water and the other is on land.[15] It has significant individual variation in duration and frequency.[15] The Bray is a long call used to attract a mate and advertise a territory during the pre-laying and pre-hatching periods.[15] It is an individually distinct call in all variables: syllables per call, duration, inter-syllable intervals, duration of syllables and frequency.[15] When calling, the bird points its head upwards and flaps its flippers slowly.[15] The Courtship Bray is similar to the Bray, however a different posture is assumed and is given synchronously by pairs during the pre-laying period: the birds stand together pointing their necks and head up, with flippers out to the side.[15] The Peep is given by chicks begging for food.[15]

Moulting Edit

Most penguins moult between mid-January and mid-February, however the initiation varies with latitude and favourable conditions such as food abundance.[16][17] Humboldt penguins are confined to land until they finish moulting.[18] They become hyperphagic during the pre-moulting period.[17] The feathers are lost and replaced within 2 weeks.[19]

Etymology Edit

Both the Humboldt penguin and the Humboldt current were named after Alexander von Humboldt. It is known in Peru as the pajaro-niño, which translates to "baby-bird", due to their waddling gait and flightless wings held out suggesting the image of an infant toddling on the beach.[20]

Distribution and habitat Edit

The Humboldt penguin is a top predator endemic to the west coast of South America.[18][21]

The Humboldt penguin's breeding distribution ranges from southern Chile along the dry and arid coastal regions of the Atacama Desert to subtropical Isla Foca in north Peru. Its range is restricted to the coast and offshore islands affected by the Humboldt current, which provides a continuous supply of nutrients and food, thus supporting huge populations of seabird.[22] In Chile, the most important breeding colony is at Isla Chañaral.[18]

Ecology Edit

 
Humboldt penguin in Eskişehir Zoo

Diet Edit

The Humboldt penguin feeds predominantly on pelagic schooling fish.[23] The consumption of cephalopods and crustaceans vary between populations.[24] Northern colonies consume primarily Atlantic saury and garfish, whilst southern populations primarily consume anchovy, Araucanian herring, silver-side, pilchard and squid.[24][25] There are seasonal differences in the Humboldt penguin's diet that reflect the changes in availability of fish species across seasons.[24]

Foraging behaviour Edit

The Humboldt penguin is a visual hunter.[26] Humboldt penguins leave their islands for foraging after sunrise and different populations have different preferred foraging distances from the colony.[23] Their foraging rhythm depends on the light intensity.[27] They spend more time foraging during overnight trips.[28] Fish are mostly seized from below through short, shallow dives.[23]

The foraging range of Humboldt penguins is between 2 and 92 km (1.2 and 57.2 mi) from Pan de Azúcar, with 90% of the foraging being from a range of 35 km (22 mi) around the island and 50% from a range of 5 km (3.1 mi).[24] The maximum depth reached is 54 m (177 ft).[21]

Failed breeders take longer foraging trips with longer and deeper dives.[29] They also dive less often than breeding penguins.

Courtship Edit

During courtship, the Humboldt penguins bow their heads to each other and exchange mutual glances with each eye, alternatively.[30] In the ecstatic display to attract a partner, the bird extends its head vertically, collapses its chest, flaps its wings and emits a loud call resembling the braying of a donkey.[19] The mutual displaying consist of the pair standing side by side and repeating the actions of the ecstatic display.[19]

Reproduction Edit

The Humboldt penguin nests in loose colonies, with most pairs laying two eggs of the same size 4 days apart that require 41 days of incubation.[31][21] Their breeding schedule is adjusted depending on the abundance of food.[17] They breed immediately after moulting, when food is abundant and solar radiation is reduced.[17]

The Humboldt penguin lay eggs from March to December, but also with peaks in April and August–September, due to individuals having a second clutch.[31][17] Half of the females successfully have two clutches per year and most were double broods.[30][31][17] If pairs lose their eggs during the first breeding season, they lay a new clutch within 1–4 months.[31] The incubation shifts last, on average, 2.5 days, before one parent takes over and allows the other to forage.[28] There are no differences in the contribution to provisioning from the male and female parents.[28]

Chicks hatch generally 2 days apart.[31] Chicks are semi-altricial and nidicolous and guarded by one parent while the other forages.[21] Chicks are fed only once every day.[31] Chicks are left unattended at the nest site after a certain age and both parents forage simultaneously.[21]

Breeding sites Edit

The historical breeding sites of this species are burrows on guano layers.[30] Nests of the Humboldt penguin can also be found at caverns, hollows, cliff tops, beaches and scrapes covered by vegetation.[20][31] They also nest at few Peruvian islands where true soil can be found for digging.[30] The majority of penguins breed on cliff tops.[31]

Migration Edit

Humboldt penguins are sedentary during the breeding season, staying in proximity to their nests and show fidelity to breeding site.[21][31] They can cover large distances, particularly in response to food shortages or changes in environmental conditions.[32][21] They are a true migrant between Peru and Chile.[32]

Threats Edit

El Niño-La Niña dynamics Edit

The ecosystem of the Humboldt current is affected by the El Niño phenomenon. During the El Niño, upwelling of nutrient-rich bottom water in the south-eastern Pacific Ocean is depressed, as well as sea surface temperature anomaly (SSTA) value increases.[33][21] Massive mortality, especially of juveniles, nest desertion and lack of reproduction occurs.[33] Humboldt penguins migrate south as marine productivity decreases, following the anchovy stocks.[21] Humboldt penguins expend more time and energy foraging as SSTA increases.[21]

Fisheries Edit

The estimated energetic demands of the total Humboldt penguin population during breeding season sums up to 1,400 tons of fish.[24] The Humboldt penguin depends on commercially exploited, schooling prey species[24] including anchovies.[34] This makes them susceptible to changes in prey availability due to overfishing.[24] They are also susceptible to entanglement in fishing nets.[35]

Human presence Edit

Humboldt penguins are extremely sensitive to human presence, with little habituation potential.[9] Passing at a 150 m (490 ft) distance from an incubating Humboldt penguin provokes a response, which is the greatest response distance reported for penguins to date, making it the most timid penguin species so far studied.[9] Humboldt penguins need up to half an hour to recover to normal heart rates after human approach, however, this time decreases with repeated visitation.[9] Cumulative stress by frequent visits and delayed return of foraging partners leads to nest desertion, consequently causing decreased breeding success at frequently visited sites.[9][27]

Habitat disturbance and feral species Edit

The introduction of feral goats on the Puñihuil islands had a detrimental impact on the Humboldt penguin population.[7] The feral goats browse the vegetation the penguins use to build their nests and they can lead to collapse to dirt burrows.[7] The connection of the island to the mainland also led to the movements of mammals onto the island.[7]

In central Chile, European rabbits and Norway rats graze on the vegetation.[36] Norway rats and black rats also predate on eggs.[37] Feral cats and dogs consume chicks, fledgelings and adult Humboldt penguins.[36]

Industrial development Edit

Some Humboldt penguin colonies face emerging pressures from industrial development; the construction of coal-fired power plants and mining proposals in Chile. Peru's largest colony faces the prospect of a major new industrial port in close proximity to the country's largest colony, at Punta San Juan. Oil spills have previously impacted some colonies. The colony of 800 birds at Cachagua was exposed to two oil spill events in 2015–16.[38] Oil spills related to port and shipping activities have impacted many species of penguins across the southern hemisphere.

In 2017, Andes Iron proposed to construct a mineral export port near the Humboldt Penguin National Reserve in Chile's Coquimbo region. The proposal was rejected on the grounds that the environmental impact would be unacceptable. The decision was welcomed by tour operators and environmentalists. Oceana was one of the non-governmental organisations lobbying for the rejection of the port proposal.[39] Andes Iron challenged the decision,[40] and environmental approval for the Dominga mine and Cruz Grande port project was eventually granted. Oceana has since challenged the proponents compliance at the work site and as of 2020 continues to lobby for the abandonment of the project and protection of region's rich marine biodiversity.[41] If constructed, the Dominga complex will include an open pit copper mine, processing facility, desalination plant and port.[42]

History of Population Decline Edit

Over-exploitation of guano Edit

The historical breeding grounds for the Humboldt penguin were guano layers which covered islands of the Peruvian and northerly Chilean coasts in which the birds could burrow.[30] The guano, a rich fertiliser and source of income for the Peruvian Government, and eggs of the Humboldt penguin were regularly sought after.[43][20][30] The birds were also frequently killed by fishermen and guano workers for their oil and skin.[20] The decline of the Humboldt penguin population is attributed to the harvest of guano in the 1800s, which led to the destruction of breeding grounds and to human disturbance.[33][20]

1982–83 El Niño phenomenon Edit

Before the 1982–83 El Niño event, the total number of individuals of Humboldt penguin individuals was estimated to be 20,000.[33] The 1982–83 El Niño phenomenon led to a major decline in the Humboldt penguin population.[33] The combination of an environment changed by human developments as well as the long duration and strong intensity of the event that year led to major effects on the fecundity and survival of the Humboldt penguins.[33] The consequences were a 65% decline in the Humboldt penguin population, migration towards the south and the failure of the 1982 class of hatchlings.[33] The surviving population in 1984 was estimated to be between 2,100 and 3,000 penguins and all were adults.[33]

Conservation Edit

Humboldt penguins were given legal protection in 1977 by the Peruvian Government and listed in Appendix I of the Convention of International Trade of Endangered Species (CITES).[44] Both Peru and Chile have implemented the CITES under national law.[44] It is categorised as vulnerable due to extreme population size fluctuations, clustered distribution and the major threats to the species not being ameliorated over time.[44][5][45] In August 2010 the Humboldt penguin of Chile and Peru, was granted protection under the U.S. Endangered Species Act.[46] Most penguins breed within protected areas.[45]

Peruvian legislation categorises the species as endangered and prohibits the hunting, possession, capture, transportation and export of the bird for commercial purposes.[45] Chile implemented a 30-year hunting ban in 1995 forbidding hunting, transport, possession and commercialisation of penguins.[45]

In 2017 a large mining project proposed by the company Andes Iron in Chile was vetoed due to the possible environmental impact on the penguins,[47] though that decision was subsequently overturned.

As of August 2018, the species is listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List, noting a declining population of 32,000 mature adults.[48] Climate change, commercial overfishing of main prey species (sardines and anchovy) and bycatch in commercial and artisanal fisheries are all contributing factors in the species' decline. Rats, feral cats and dog attacks threaten some colonies. Historically, the Humboldt penguin population was impacted by the extraction of guano from their breeding colonies, which reduced the available habitat for burrowing and nesting.

In captivity Edit

In addition to their home waters near South America, Humboldt penguins can be found in zoos all around the world, including Spain, Germany,[49] India, South Korea, Ireland,[50][51] Japan,[52] the United Kingdom,[53] the United States[54] and other locations.

Mr. Sea Edit

The oldest penguin at Woodland Park Zoo and one of the oldest penguins in North America, Mr. Sea was euthanized after a decline in activity and appetite. He was 2 months short of his 32nd birthday. The average age for a Humbolt penguin that survives its first year is 17.6 years. He has 12 viable grandchicks, great-grandchicks, and great-great grandchicks.[55]

Escape from Tokyo Zoo Edit

One of the 135 Humboldt penguins from Tokyo Sea Life Park (Kasai Rinkai Suizokuen) thrived in Tokyo Bay for 82 days after apparently scaling the 4-metre-high wall and managing to get through a barbed-wire fence into the bay.[56] The penguin, known only by its number (337), was recaptured by the zoo keepers in late May 2012.[57]

US discovery Edit

In 1953, a Humboldt penguin was found in The Bronx, New York, US. It is not known whether the animal had escaped from a private collection or whether it was a vagrant but the local zoo's population was fully accounted for.[58]

Same-sex raising of young Edit

In 2009 at the Bremerhaven Zoo in Germany, two adult male Humboldt penguins adopted an egg that had been abandoned by its biological parents. After the egg hatched, the two penguins raised, protected, cared for, and fed the chick in the same manner that heterosexual penguin couples raise their own offspring. A further example of this kind of behavior came in 2014, when Jumbs and Kermit, two Humboldt Penguins at Wingham Wildlife Park, became the center of international media attention as two males who had pair bonded a number of years earlier and then successfully hatched and reared an egg given to them as surrogate parents after the mother abandoned it halfway through incubation.[59]

Gallery Edit

References Edit

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  56. ^ Fugitive penguin 337 spotted alive in Tokyo Bay, Reuters, 17 May 2012
  57. ^ "Tokyo keepers catch fugitive Penguin 337". BBC News. 25 May 2012. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
  58. ^ "Bronx Man Finds Penguin on Doorstep (1953)". The Troy Record. 1953-06-11. p. 31. Retrieved 2020-05-09.
  59. ^ Wingham Wildlife Park

External links Edit

  • Humboldt penguin on PenguinWorld
  • BirdLife species factsheet
  • Humboldt penguins at Marwell

humboldt, penguin, spheniscus, humboldti, medium, sized, penguin, resides, south, america, range, mainly, contains, most, coastal, peru, nearest, relatives, african, penguin, magellanic, penguin, galápagos, penguin, cold, water, current, swims, both, named, af. The Humboldt penguin Spheniscus humboldti is a medium sized penguin It resides in South America its range mainly contains most of coastal Peru 3 Its nearest relatives are the African penguin the Magellanic penguin and the Galapagos penguin The Humboldt penguin and the cold water current it swims in both are named after the explorer Alexander von Humboldt The species is listed as vulnerable by the IUCN with no population recovery plan in place 4 The current population is composed of 32 000 mature individuals and is going down 5 It is a migrant species 5 Humboldt penguinAt Islas Ballestas PeruConservation statusVulnerable IUCN 3 1 1 CITES Appendix I CITES 2 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder SphenisciformesFamily SpheniscidaeGenus SpheniscusSpecies S humboldtiBinomial nameSpheniscus humboldtiMeyen 1834Distribution of the Humboldt penguin 80 of the world s population lives in the protected areas of the Northern Chilean regions III and IV Humboldt penguins nest on islands and rocky coasts burrowing holes in guano and sometimes using scrapes or caves In South America the Humboldt penguin is found only along the Pacific coast and the range of the Humboldt penguin overlaps that of the Magellanic penguin on the central Chilean coast It is vagrant in Ecuador and Colombia 6 The Humboldt penguin has been known to live in mixed species colonies with the Magellanic penguin in at least two different locations at the south of Chile 7 8 The Humboldt penguin has become a focus of ecotourism over the last decades 9 Contents 1 Description 1 1 Vocalisation 1 2 Moulting 2 Etymology 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Ecology 4 1 Diet 4 2 Foraging behaviour 4 3 Courtship 4 4 Reproduction 4 5 Breeding sites 4 6 Migration 5 Threats 5 1 El Nino La Nina dynamics 5 2 Fisheries 5 3 Human presence 5 4 Habitat disturbance and feral species 5 5 Industrial development 6 History of Population Decline 6 1 Over exploitation of guano 6 2 1982 83 El Nino phenomenon 7 Conservation 8 In captivity 8 1 Mr Sea 8 2 Escape from Tokyo Zoo 8 3 US discovery 8 4 Same sex raising of young 9 Gallery 10 References 11 External linksDescription EditHumboldt penguins are medium sized penguins growing to 56 70 cm 22 28 in long and a weight of 2 9 to 6 kg 6 4 to 13 2 lb 10 11 12 The sex of the Humboldt penguin cannot be recognised via differences in plumage as they are monomorphic The male is heavier and larger than the females 13 Their sex can be determined via head width and bill length the male has a longer bill than the female 13 While all the Spheniscus penguins are close to each other in size the Humboldt penguin is the heaviest species in the genus with 123 females weighing 4 05 kg 8 9 lb on average and 165 males averaging 4 7 kg 10 lb 12 Humboldt penguins have a black head with a white border that runs from behind the eye around the black ear coverts and chin and joins at the throat They have blackish grey upperparts and whitish underparts with a black breast band that extends down the flanks to the thigh They have a fleshy pink base to the bill Juveniles have dark heads and no breast band They have spines on their tongue which they use to hold their prey 14 Vocalisation Edit The Humboldt penguin has different calls that it uses to communicate in different ways The function of its calls are consistent among Spheniscus species If an individual comes too close to an adult Humboldt penguin the Yell is a warning call which is followed by pecking or chasing if ignored 15 A higher density of penguins leads to more territorial and aggressive behaviours which leads to more Yells 15 The Throb is a soft call between pairs at the nest used by incubating birds when their mates return to the nest 15 The Haw is a short call given by juveniles alone in the water and by paired birds when one is on the water and the other is on land 15 It has significant individual variation in duration and frequency 15 The Bray is a long call used to attract a mate and advertise a territory during the pre laying and pre hatching periods 15 It is an individually distinct call in all variables syllables per call duration inter syllable intervals duration of syllables and frequency 15 When calling the bird points its head upwards and flaps its flippers slowly 15 The Courtship Bray is similar to the Bray however a different posture is assumed and is given synchronously by pairs during the pre laying period the birds stand together pointing their necks and head up with flippers out to the side 15 The Peep is given by chicks begging for food 15 Moulting Edit Most penguins moult between mid January and mid February however the initiation varies with latitude and favourable conditions such as food abundance 16 17 Humboldt penguins are confined to land until they finish moulting 18 They become hyperphagic during the pre moulting period 17 The feathers are lost and replaced within 2 weeks 19 Etymology EditBoth the Humboldt penguin and the Humboldt current were named after Alexander von Humboldt It is known in Peru as the pajaro nino which translates to baby bird due to their waddling gait and flightless wings held out suggesting the image of an infant toddling on the beach 20 Distribution and habitat EditThe Humboldt penguin is a top predator endemic to the west coast of South America 18 21 The Humboldt penguin s breeding distribution ranges from southern Chile along the dry and arid coastal regions of the Atacama Desert to subtropical Isla Foca in north Peru Its range is restricted to the coast and offshore islands affected by the Humboldt current which provides a continuous supply of nutrients and food thus supporting huge populations of seabird 22 In Chile the most important breeding colony is at Isla Chanaral 18 Ecology Edit Humboldt penguin in Eskisehir ZooDiet Edit The Humboldt penguin feeds predominantly on pelagic schooling fish 23 The consumption of cephalopods and crustaceans vary between populations 24 Northern colonies consume primarily Atlantic saury and garfish whilst southern populations primarily consume anchovy Araucanian herring silver side pilchard and squid 24 25 There are seasonal differences in the Humboldt penguin s diet that reflect the changes in availability of fish species across seasons 24 Foraging behaviour Edit The Humboldt penguin is a visual hunter 26 Humboldt penguins leave their islands for foraging after sunrise and different populations have different preferred foraging distances from the colony 23 Their foraging rhythm depends on the light intensity 27 They spend more time foraging during overnight trips 28 Fish are mostly seized from below through short shallow dives 23 The foraging range of Humboldt penguins is between 2 and 92 km 1 2 and 57 2 mi from Pan de Azucar with 90 of the foraging being from a range of 35 km 22 mi around the island and 50 from a range of 5 km 3 1 mi 24 The maximum depth reached is 54 m 177 ft 21 Failed breeders take longer foraging trips with longer and deeper dives 29 They also dive less often than breeding penguins Courtship Edit During courtship the Humboldt penguins bow their heads to each other and exchange mutual glances with each eye alternatively 30 In the ecstatic display to attract a partner the bird extends its head vertically collapses its chest flaps its wings and emits a loud call resembling the braying of a donkey 19 The mutual displaying consist of the pair standing side by side and repeating the actions of the ecstatic display 19 Reproduction Edit The Humboldt penguin nests in loose colonies with most pairs laying two eggs of the same size 4 days apart that require 41 days of incubation 31 21 Their breeding schedule is adjusted depending on the abundance of food 17 They breed immediately after moulting when food is abundant and solar radiation is reduced 17 The Humboldt penguin lay eggs from March to December but also with peaks in April and August September due to individuals having a second clutch 31 17 Half of the females successfully have two clutches per year and most were double broods 30 31 17 If pairs lose their eggs during the first breeding season they lay a new clutch within 1 4 months 31 The incubation shifts last on average 2 5 days before one parent takes over and allows the other to forage 28 There are no differences in the contribution to provisioning from the male and female parents 28 Chicks hatch generally 2 days apart 31 Chicks are semi altricial and nidicolous and guarded by one parent while the other forages 21 Chicks are fed only once every day 31 Chicks are left unattended at the nest site after a certain age and both parents forage simultaneously 21 Breeding sites Edit The historical breeding sites of this species are burrows on guano layers 30 Nests of the Humboldt penguin can also be found at caverns hollows cliff tops beaches and scrapes covered by vegetation 20 31 They also nest at few Peruvian islands where true soil can be found for digging 30 The majority of penguins breed on cliff tops 31 Migration Edit Humboldt penguins are sedentary during the breeding season staying in proximity to their nests and show fidelity to breeding site 21 31 They can cover large distances particularly in response to food shortages or changes in environmental conditions 32 21 They are a true migrant between Peru and Chile 32 Threats EditEl Nino La Nina dynamics Edit The ecosystem of the Humboldt current is affected by the El Nino phenomenon During the El Nino upwelling of nutrient rich bottom water in the south eastern Pacific Ocean is depressed as well as sea surface temperature anomaly SSTA value increases 33 21 Massive mortality especially of juveniles nest desertion and lack of reproduction occurs 33 Humboldt penguins migrate south as marine productivity decreases following the anchovy stocks 21 Humboldt penguins expend more time and energy foraging as SSTA increases 21 Fisheries Edit The estimated energetic demands of the total Humboldt penguin population during breeding season sums up to 1 400 tons of fish 24 The Humboldt penguin depends on commercially exploited schooling prey species 24 including anchovies 34 This makes them susceptible to changes in prey availability due to overfishing 24 They are also susceptible to entanglement in fishing nets 35 Human presence Edit Humboldt penguins are extremely sensitive to human presence with little habituation potential 9 Passing at a 150 m 490 ft distance from an incubating Humboldt penguin provokes a response which is the greatest response distance reported for penguins to date making it the most timid penguin species so far studied 9 Humboldt penguins need up to half an hour to recover to normal heart rates after human approach however this time decreases with repeated visitation 9 Cumulative stress by frequent visits and delayed return of foraging partners leads to nest desertion consequently causing decreased breeding success at frequently visited sites 9 27 Habitat disturbance and feral species Edit The introduction of feral goats on the Punihuil islands had a detrimental impact on the Humboldt penguin population 7 The feral goats browse the vegetation the penguins use to build their nests and they can lead to collapse to dirt burrows 7 The connection of the island to the mainland also led to the movements of mammals onto the island 7 In central Chile European rabbits and Norway rats graze on the vegetation 36 Norway rats and black rats also predate on eggs 37 Feral cats and dogs consume chicks fledgelings and adult Humboldt penguins 36 Industrial development Edit Some Humboldt penguin colonies face emerging pressures from industrial development the construction of coal fired power plants and mining proposals in Chile Peru s largest colony faces the prospect of a major new industrial port in close proximity to the country s largest colony at Punta San Juan Oil spills have previously impacted some colonies The colony of 800 birds at Cachagua was exposed to two oil spill events in 2015 16 38 Oil spills related to port and shipping activities have impacted many species of penguins across the southern hemisphere In 2017 Andes Iron proposed to construct a mineral export port near the Humboldt Penguin National Reserve in Chile s Coquimbo region The proposal was rejected on the grounds that the environmental impact would be unacceptable The decision was welcomed by tour operators and environmentalists Oceana was one of the non governmental organisations lobbying for the rejection of the port proposal 39 Andes Iron challenged the decision 40 and environmental approval for the Dominga mine and Cruz Grande port project was eventually granted Oceana has since challenged the proponents compliance at the work site and as of 2020 continues to lobby for the abandonment of the project and protection of region s rich marine biodiversity 41 If constructed the Dominga complex will include an open pit copper mine processing facility desalination plant and port 42 History of Population Decline EditOver exploitation of guano Edit The historical breeding grounds for the Humboldt penguin were guano layers which covered islands of the Peruvian and northerly Chilean coasts in which the birds could burrow 30 The guano a rich fertiliser and source of income for the Peruvian Government and eggs of the Humboldt penguin were regularly sought after 43 20 30 The birds were also frequently killed by fishermen and guano workers for their oil and skin 20 The decline of the Humboldt penguin population is attributed to the harvest of guano in the 1800s which led to the destruction of breeding grounds and to human disturbance 33 20 1982 83 El Nino phenomenon Edit Before the 1982 83 El Nino event the total number of individuals of Humboldt penguin individuals was estimated to be 20 000 33 The 1982 83 El Nino phenomenon led to a major decline in the Humboldt penguin population 33 The combination of an environment changed by human developments as well as the long duration and strong intensity of the event that year led to major effects on the fecundity and survival of the Humboldt penguins 33 The consequences were a 65 decline in the Humboldt penguin population migration towards the south and the failure of the 1982 class of hatchlings 33 The surviving population in 1984 was estimated to be between 2 100 and 3 000 penguins and all were adults 33 Conservation EditHumboldt penguins were given legal protection in 1977 by the Peruvian Government and listed in Appendix I of the Convention of International Trade of Endangered Species CITES 44 Both Peru and Chile have implemented the CITES under national law 44 It is categorised as vulnerable due to extreme population size fluctuations clustered distribution and the major threats to the species not being ameliorated over time 44 5 45 In August 2010 the Humboldt penguin of Chile and Peru was granted protection under the U S Endangered Species Act 46 Most penguins breed within protected areas 45 Peruvian legislation categorises the species as endangered and prohibits the hunting possession capture transportation and export of the bird for commercial purposes 45 Chile implemented a 30 year hunting ban in 1995 forbidding hunting transport possession and commercialisation of penguins 45 In 2017 a large mining project proposed by the company Andes Iron in Chile was vetoed due to the possible environmental impact on the penguins 47 though that decision was subsequently overturned As of August 2018 the species is listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List noting a declining population of 32 000 mature adults 48 Climate change commercial overfishing of main prey species sardines and anchovy and bycatch in commercial and artisanal fisheries are all contributing factors in the species decline Rats feral cats and dog attacks threaten some colonies Historically the Humboldt penguin population was impacted by the extraction of guano from their breeding colonies which reduced the available habitat for burrowing and nesting In captivity EditIn addition to their home waters near South America Humboldt penguins can be found in zoos all around the world including Spain Germany 49 India South Korea Ireland 50 51 Japan 52 the United Kingdom 53 the United States 54 and other locations Mr Sea Edit The oldest penguin at Woodland Park Zoo and one of the oldest penguins in North America Mr Sea was euthanized after a decline in activity and appetite He was 2 months short of his 32nd birthday The average age for a Humbolt penguin that survives its first year is 17 6 years He has 12 viable grandchicks great grandchicks and great great grandchicks 55 Escape from Tokyo Zoo Edit One of the 135 Humboldt penguins from Tokyo Sea Life Park Kasai Rinkai Suizokuen thrived in Tokyo Bay for 82 days after apparently scaling the 4 metre high wall and managing to get through a barbed wire fence into the bay 56 The penguin known only by its number 337 was recaptured by the zoo keepers in late May 2012 57 US discovery Edit In 1953 a Humboldt penguin was found in The Bronx New York US It is not known whether the animal had escaped from a private collection or whether it was a vagrant but the local zoo s population was fully accounted for 58 Same sex raising of young Edit In 2009 at the Bremerhaven Zoo in Germany two adult male Humboldt penguins adopted an egg that had been abandoned by its biological parents After the egg hatched the two penguins raised protected cared for and fed the chick in the same manner that heterosexual penguin couples raise their own offspring A further example of this kind of behavior came in 2014 when Jumbs and Kermit two Humboldt Penguins at Wingham Wildlife Park became the center of international media attention as two males who had pair bonded a number of years earlier and then successfully hatched and reared an egg given to them as surrogate parents after the mother abandoned it halfway through incubation 59 Gallery Edit Upper body Humboldt penguin at Newquay Zoo St Louis Zoo A pair kissing at Cotswold Wildlife Park Swimming underwater Back At the Dublin Zoo source source source source source source Humboldt penguin underwater at the Bremerhaven Zoo Humboldt penguin during moult at the Cornish Seal Sanctuary At the Oregon Zoo Humboldt Penguins at Jijamata Udyaan Mumbai India Spheniscus humboldti MHNT At the Woodland Park Zoo In captivity at Brookfield ZooReferences Edit BirdLife International 2020 Spheniscus humboldti IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T22697817A182714418 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 3 RLTS T22697817A182714418 en Retrieved 13 November 2021 Appendices CITES cites org Retrieved 2022 01 14 Changes in abundance and distribution of Humboldt Penguin Viana et al Marine Ornithology 42 153 159 2014 PDF The IUCN red list of threatened species retrieved April 2019 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species a b c BirdLife International 2018 08 09 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species Humboldt Penguin IUCN Red List of Threatened Species Retrieved 2020 04 08 C Michael Hogan 2008 Magellanic Penguin GlobalTwitcher com ed N Stromberg Archived 2012 06 07 at the Wayback Machine a b c d Simeone Alejandro Schlatter Roberto P 1998 Threats to a Mixed Species Colony of Spheniscus Penguins in Southern Chile Colonial Waterbirds 21 3 418 doi 10 2307 1521654 JSTOR 1521654 Hiriart Bertrand L Simeone A Reyes Arriagada R Riquelme V Putz K Luthi B 2010 Description of a mixed species colony of Humboldt Spheniscus humboldti and Magallanic Penguin S magellanicus at Metalqui Island Chiloe southern Chile Boletin Chileno de Ornitologia 16 1 42 47 a b c d e Ellenberg Ursula Mattern Thomas Seddon Philip J Jorquera Guillermo Luna 2006 11 01 Physiological and reproductive consequences of human disturbance in Humboldt penguins The need for species specific visitor management Biological Conservation 133 1 95 106 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2006 05 019 ISSN 0006 3207 Humboldt penguin Humboldt penguin Philadelphia Zoo Archived from the original on February 19 2012 Retrieved October 16 2017 Humboldt Penguin Spheniscus humboldti WAZA World Association of Zoos and Aquariums WAZA Archived from the original on 13 April 2012 Retrieved 12 February 2012 a b Dunning John B Jr ed 2008 CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses 2nd ed CRC Press ISBN 978 1 4200 6444 5 a b Zavalaga C B Paredes R 1997 Sex determination of adult Humboldt penguins using morphometric characters Journal of Field Ornithology 68 1 102 112 Penguins of the World By Wayne Lynch 2007 2nd Edition Firefly Books Ltd Richmond Hill Ontario Canada a b c d e f g h i j Thumser N N Ficken M S 1998 Comparison of the vocal repertoires of captive Spheniscus penguins PDF Marine Ornithology 26 41 48 Paredes Rosana Zavalaga Carlos B Battistini Gabriella Majluf Patricia McGill Patricia 2003 Status of the Humboldt Penguin in Peru 1999 2000 Waterbirds 26 2 129 doi 10 1675 1524 4695 2003 026 0129 sothpi 2 0 co 2 ISSN 1524 4695 S2CID 85818196 a b c d e f Paredes Rosana Zavalaga Carlos B Boness Daryl J 2002 01 01 du Plessis M ed Patterns of Egg Laying and Breeding Success in Humboldt Penguins Spheniscus Humboldti at Punta San Juan Peru The Auk 119 1 244 250 doi 10 1093 auk 119 1 244 ISSN 1938 4254 a b c Mattern Thomas Ellenberg Ursula Luna Jorquera Guillermo Davis Lloyd 2004 09 01 Humboldt Penguin Census on Isla Chanaral Chile Recent Increase or Past Underestimate of Penguin Numbers Waterbirds 27 3 268 276 doi 10 1675 1524 4695 2004 027 0368 HPCOIC 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 85668426 a b c Merritt Kathleen King Nancy E 1987 Behavioral sex differences and activity patterns of captive humboldt penguins Spheniscus humboldti Zoo Biology 6 2 129 138 doi 10 1002 zoo 1430060204 ISSN 1098 2361 a b c d e Coker Robert E 1919 Habits and economic relations of the guano birds of Peru PDF Proceedings of the United States National Museum 56 2298 449 511 doi 10 5479 si 00963801 56 2298 449 hdl 10088 15094 ISSN 0096 3801 permanent dead link a b c d e f g h i j Culik B Hennicke J Martin T 2000 08 01 Humboldt penguins outmanoeuvring El Nino Journal of Experimental Biology 203 15 2311 2322 doi 10 1242 jeb 203 15 2311 ISSN 0022 0949 PMID 10887069 Hays Coppelia 1986 01 01 Effects of the 1982 1983 El Nino on Humboldt penguin colonies in Peru Biological Conservation 36 2 169 180 doi 10 1016 0006 3207 86 90005 4 ISSN 0006 3207 a b c Wilson Rory P Wilson Marie Pierre Duffy David Cameron M Braulio Araya Klages Norbert 1989 01 01 Diving behaviour and prey of the Humboldt Penguin Spheniscus humboldti Journal fur Ornithologie 130 1 75 79 doi 10 1007 BF01647164 ISSN 1439 0361 S2CID 38410399 a b c d e f g Herling C Culik B M Hennicke J C May 2005 Diet of the Humboldt penguin Spheniscus humboldti in northern and southern Chile Marine Biology 147 1 13 25 doi 10 1007 s00227 004 1547 8 ISSN 0025 3162 S2CID 55663752 Spheniscus humboldti Humboldt penguin Animal Diversity Web Martin G R Young S R 1984 12 22 The eye of the humboldt penguin Spheniscus humboldti visual fields and schematic optics Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B Biological Sciences 223 1231 197 222 Bibcode 1984RSPSB 223 197M doi 10 1098 rspb 1984 0090 ISSN 0080 4649 PMID 6151660 S2CID 24295277 a b Taylor Sabrina S Leonard Marty L Boness Daryl J Majluf Patricia 2002 04 01 Foraging by Humboldt penguins Spheniscus humboldti during the chick rearing period general patterns sex differences and recommendations to reduce incidental catches in fishing nets Canadian Journal of Zoology 80 4 700 707 doi 10 1139 z02 046 ISSN 0008 4301 a b c Williams Tony D 2012 08 05 Parental Care Physiological Adaptations for Breeding in Birds Princeton University Press doi 10 23943 princeton 9780691139821 003 0006 ISBN 978 0 691 13982 1 Blay Nicola Cote Isabelle M December 2001 Optimal conditions for breeding of captive humboldt penguins Spheniscus humboldti A survey of British zoos Zoo Biology 20 6 545 555 doi 10 1002 zoo 10002 ISSN 0733 3188 a b c d e f Murphy Robert Cushman Jaques Francis Lee 1936 Oceanic birds of South America a study of species of the related coasts and seas including the American quadrant of Antarctica based upon the Brewster Sanford collection in the American Museum of Natural History Vol v 1 1936 New York Macmillan Co a b c d e f g h i Paredes Rosana Zavalaga Carlos B August 2001 Nesting sites and nest types as important factors for the conservation of Humboldt penguins Sphensicus humboldti Biological Conservation 100 2 199 205 doi 10 1016 s0006 3207 01 00023 4 ISSN 0006 3207 a b UNEP United Nations Environment Programme 2003 World Conservation Monitoring Centre report on the status and conservation of the Humboldt penguin Spheniscus humboldti United Nations Environ ment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre Cambridge a b c d e f g h Hays Coppelia 1986 01 01 Effects of the 1982 1983 El Nino on Humboldt penguin colonies in Peru Biological Conservation 36 2 169 180 doi 10 1016 0006 3207 86 90005 4 ISSN 0006 3207 Sea World s Split Personality penguins 1991 Arizona Daily Star 1991 06 23 p 67 Retrieved 2020 07 02 Majluf Patricia Babcock Elizabeth A Riveros Juan Carlos Schreiber Milena Arias Alderete William October 2002 Catch and Bycatch of Sea Birds and Marine Mammals in the Small Scale Fishery of Punta San Juan Peru Conservation Biology 16 5 1333 1343 doi 10 1046 j 1523 1739 2002 00564 x ISSN 0888 8892 S2CID 86452046 a b Simeone Alejandro Bernal Mariano 2000 Effects of Habitat Modification on Breeding Seabirds A Case Study in Central Chile Waterbirds The International Journal of Waterbird Biology 23 3 449 456 doi 10 2307 1522182 ISSN 1524 4695 JSTOR 1522182 Simeone Alejandro Luna Jorquera Guillermo October 2012 Estimating rat predation on Humboldt Penguin colonies in north central Chile Journal of Ornithology 153 4 1079 1085 doi 10 1007 s10336 012 0837 z hdl 10533 127889 ISSN 2193 7192 S2CID 11351679 International BirdLife International BirdLife 2018 08 09 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species Spheniscus humboldti IUCN Red List of Threatened Species Retrieved 2020 07 10 Penguins force suspension of 2 5bn mining project The Independent 2017 10 13 Retrieved 2020 07 10 Andes Iron to fight for US 2 5B project www mining journal com 2017 08 24 Retrieved 2020 07 10 Chilean authorities eye controversial Cruz Grande port project Mongabay Environmental News 2020 03 25 Retrieved 2020 07 10 Andes Iron and Chilean ME enter conciliation process over 2 5 billion project MINING COM 2018 02 12 Retrieved 2020 07 10 Paredes Rosana Zavalaga Carlos B Battistini Gabriella Majluf Patricia McGill Patricia 2003 Status of the Humboldt Penguin in Peru 1999 2000 Waterbirds 26 2 129 doi 10 1675 1524 4695 2003 026 0129 sothpi 2 0 co 2 ISSN 1524 4695 S2CID 85818196 a b c Paredes Rosana Zavalaga Carlos B Battistini Gabriella Majluf Patricia McGill Patricia 2003 Status of the Humboldt Penguin in Peru 1999 2000 Waterbirds 26 2 129 doi 10 1675 1524 4695 2003 026 0129 sothpi 2 0 co 2 ISSN 1524 4695 S2CID 85818196 a b c d Valdes Velasquez Armando de la Puente Santiago busalleu alonso cardena marco Majluf Patricia Simeone Alejandro 2013 01 01 Humboldt Penguin Spheniscus humboldti Penguins Natural History and Conservation p 20 ISBN 978 0 295 99284 6 retrieved 2020 04 16 Five Penguins Win U S Endangered Species Act Protection Turtle Island Restoration Network Farrell Jeff October 13 2017 Penguins put 2 5 billion mining project in Chile on ice The Independent Retrieved October 16 2017 BirdLife International 2018 08 09 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species Spheniscus humboldti IUCN Red List of Threatened Species Retrieved 2020 07 10 HUMBOLDT PINGUIN luisenpark de Luisenpark Retrieved October 16 2017 Humboldt penguin Fota Wildlife Park fotawildlife ie Fota Wildlife Park Retrieved October 16 2017 Humboldt penguin dublinzoo ie Dublin Zoo Retrieved October 16 2017 ペンギン舎 tobuzoo com in Japanese Archived from the original on September 14 2017 Retrieved October 16 2017 Humboldt penguins chesterzoo org Archived from the original on October 16 2017 Retrieved October 16 2017 Taylor Family Humboldt Penguin Exhibit milwaukeezoo org Retrieved October 16 2017 Farewell Mr Sea Our beloved oldest penguin passes away Retrieved 2020 11 23 Fugitive penguin 337 spotted alive in Tokyo Bay Reuters 17 May 2012 Tokyo keepers catch fugitive Penguin 337 BBC News 25 May 2012 Retrieved 4 March 2017 Bronx Man Finds Penguin on Doorstep 1953 The Troy Record 1953 06 11 p 31 Retrieved 2020 05 09 Wingham Wildlife ParkExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Spheniscus humboldti Wikispecies has information related to Spheniscus humboldti Humboldt penguin on PenguinWorld BirdLife species factsheet Humboldt penguins at Marwell Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Humboldt penguin amp oldid 1168176415, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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