Waterloo Region Record

Toronto zoo welcomes four African penguin chicks

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TORONTO — The Toronto Zoo says it has successful­ly hatched four African penguin chicks.

The zoo says of the 18 penguin species around the world, the African penguin is one of the most endangered — the current population of wild African penguins is less than half of what it was 40 years ago.

It says the first two chicks were laid by a pair named Thandiwe and Matata, who were recommende­d to breed by the Species Survival Plan, but both eggs had to be given to surrogate parents as the pair didn’t sit on the eggs.

The other two chicks were laid by another pair, Eldon and Chupa, and one of their eggs went to a surrogate pair.

The zoo says incubation by the parents occurs for just over a month, then the hatched chicks stay with their parents in the nest for another three weeks.

The chicks — three females and a male — hatched on Feb. 12, 15, 27, and March 4.

“By this point the chicks are large and mobile enough for the penguin keepers to hand-raise them,” the zoo said Friday in a Facebook post. “The keepers are teaching the chicks to be hand-fed fish and to get on a scale for daily weigh-ins.”

They’re expected to be able to join the zoo’s penguin colony at around 80 days.

The fact that three of the chicks are female “is good news for North American zoo population, which is predominan­tly male,” the zoo said.

Fewer than 20,000 breeding pairs are left in South Africa, it said.

 ?? JEFF CHIU, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An African penguin walks away with a heart shaped valentine for nesting material on Feb. 13 at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco.The Toronto Zoo has successful­ly hatched four chicks.
JEFF CHIU, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An African penguin walks away with a heart shaped valentine for nesting material on Feb. 13 at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco.The Toronto Zoo has successful­ly hatched four chicks.

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