Otago Daily Times

Vaccine progress good news for penguins

- HAMISH MACLEAN Environmen­t reporter hamish.maclean@odt.co.nz

HOPE for Otago’s yelloweyed penguins could come from an improbable 18,000km away.

Research led by Northumbri­a University, in the United Kingdom, could be an important step closer to a vaccine for a major killer of young yelloweyed penguin chicks.

The research team includes scientists from the Department of Conservati­on (Doc), the University of Otago and Massey University.

It identified a new species of bacteria causing avian diphtheria, which is plaguing yelloweyed penguin population­s in mainland New Zealand.

The team also discovered some proteins that could be used as a vaccine, and could help protect the species from local extinction due to outbreaks of the disease.

Doc technical adviser Melanie Young said avian diphtheria had affected up to 93% of yelloweyed penguin chicks in their northern range along the South Island’s east coast for more than 20 years.

The disease was fatal if left untreated.

‘‘If chicks don’t survive year after year, this has a knockon effect on population stability,’’ she said.

Doc threatened species veterinari­an Kate McInnes said the study helped people working with penguins to understand how the bacterium attacked baby yelloweyed penguins.

‘‘It means that we can focus our treatments to ensure that more yelloweyed penguin chicks survive,’’ she said.

Yelloweyed Penguin Trust conservati­on science adviser Trudi Webster said at Moeraki, Penguin Rescue had been treating birds in the wild with antibiotic­s for several years.

In Dunedin, though, most of the treatments last year had been done after chicks were uplifted from their nests and taken to the Dunedin Wildlife Hospital.

Nests along the coast could be spread out and hard for conservati­onists to get to.

The daily doses of antibiotic­s used to treat avian diphtheria were highly stressful for both chicks and their parents, she said.

A vaccine that reduced the need for that much human interventi­on at penguins’ nests would be fantastic, Dr Webster said.

In November last year, the Otago Daily Times reported 100 yelloweyed penguin chicks were taken into care with avian diphtheria that month.

University of Otago research fellow Sarah Saunderson said the collaborat­ion with Northumbri­a University allowed significan­t progress with the research.

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