The New Zealand Herald

Mass deaths of penguins a ‘wake-up call’

Starvation as a result of extreme weather may become more common, says expert

- Jamie Morton

Senvironme­nt cores of dead little blue penguins that have washed up on northern beaches this year probably died of starvation in extreme sea conditions, researcher­s say.

And they warn that climate change and its big storms could mean many more mass deaths of cherished bird and other vulnerable marine species.

Extreme weather, including several ex-tropical cyclones and recordhot sea surface temperatur­es, led to high numbers of reports of dead penguins washing up on beaches across the upper North Island.

The Department of Conservati­on’s Tauranga office has had an average of five calls a week since February, and Western Bay Wildlife Trust’s Julia Graham said the trust had 58 calls about dead penguins in two weeks.

Researcher­s who did necropsies of 11 birds collected in March and April from Omaha Beach and Tawharanui Peninsula near Auckland indicated they were starving when they died.

Forest and Bird seabird expert Dr Karen Baird and Massey University’s Dr Daniel Thomas, along with students, found all of the birds had depleted fat reserves and had started using pectoral muscle for energy, resulting in wasting.

Ten of the birds had empty stomachs, one had eaten a small amount of grass, and all showed other signs of starvation.

“These birds starved after experienci­ng a series of severe weather events, which may have prevented them from feeding, and these results may also explain the deaths of many hundreds of other little penguins around northern New Zealand,” Baird said.

“We also found that most of these birds had recently completed moult suggesting they also hadn’t been able to put on enough condition prior to the moult.”

Moulting could take three to four weeks, during which the birds could not feed.

“Once they head back to sea they need to forage successful­ly to quickly regain lost body weight.”

Baird noted the record marine heatwave in the Tasman Sea, which also affected the East Auckland Current as it flowed into the Hauraki Gulf, raising sea surface temperatur­es around the north of New Zealand.

“High temperatur­es could affect productivi­ty and hence food supply but high temperatur­es have likely exacerbate­d . . . summer storms causing turbidity and hence poor visibility at critical times for little penguins.”

Penguins were visual predators, and needed to see to be able to feed.

“We are concerned that with climate disruption causing high sea temperatur­es, summer storms could become more common and what has been previously seen as a one-in-20year event could become more frequent,” she said.

“Population­s like little blue penguins [can recover] from infrequent bad events by breeding but if it happens much more frequently, the population [is unable to] recover.

“I think it’s a wake-up call that we can’t expect always to have penguins, unless we start to think more about how we can actively manage them.”

The now-dissipatin­g marine heatwave was the most significan­t recorded in New Zealand, and would be considered unusual even under climate change projection­s for 2050. But new research has found such events were becoming more frequent as the planet warmed.

Hundreds of shearwater­s, petrels, fairy prions and shags, along with dead poisonous pufferfish, were also reported to have washed up along coastlines in January.

Little blue penguins were distribute­d around New Zealand, and other population­s such as those in Oamaru have not suffered the same fate.

“Outside of reserves and protected population­s their distributi­on appears to be shrinking and population­s declining,” Baird said.

“We don’t know what the population is in the Auckland region or how much these deaths could have affected it.” — Additional reporting by

Zoe Hunter of Bay of Plenty Times

 ?? Picture / NZME ?? Necropsies of 11 blue penguins found they had depleted fat reserves and other signs of starvation.
Picture / NZME Necropsies of 11 blue penguins found they had depleted fat reserves and other signs of starvation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand