Scientists try to boost Argentina's penguin population
February 26, 1999
Web posted at: 6:26 p.m. EST (2326 GMT)
PUNTA TOMBO, Argentina (CNN) -- Every September, Magellanic
penguins return to the bleak shores near Punta Tombo to mate
and raise their chicks. But each year, the penguin population
goes down by a few percentage points. Researchers are compiling
data on the reasons for the decline and trying to reverse it.
The New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society has
sponsored a penguin study for 16 years. Through banding,
measuring and weighing the Punta Tombo penguins, and tracking
their movements by satellite, researchers are learning how
the penguins survive -- and how they die.
"The more you know about a species, the more you understand
about how better to help protect them," said Alan Clark of
the Wildlife Conservation Society.
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About three out of four penguin chicks do not live to the
fledging stage, Clark said. Fresh out of the nest, they are
easy prey for foxes, armadillos and gulls.
Even if they make it out of the nest and enter the sea, most
young penguins starve to death during their first year. Some
conservationists blame overfishing by trawler fleets in the
areas where penguins feed.
Another serious threat cited by conservationists is pollution
from oil tankers, which repeatedly kills thousands of
penguins along Argentina's coast.
While the law protects the penguins from being hunted by man,
only international conservation measures can prevent them
from being wiped out by other human activity, some experts
say.
Correspondent Gary Strieker contributed to this report.
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RELATED SITES:
Wildlife Conservation Society
SeaWeb
IUCN -- World Conservation Union
Year of the Ocean
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