Categories
Animals Nature Penguins Weather

Emperor penguin discovered on the beach after swimming 2k miles to Australia




Sometimes you feel the need to move on. Somewhere there’s an ocean, innocent and wild. Somewhere, someone’s calling you, and when the chips are down, you’re just a traveling penguin. As in Gus, the Emperor penguin who just traversed more than 2,000 miles of open ocean from his home in Antarctica to the town of Denmark in Western Australia. Pioneer that he is, Gus became the first Emperor penguin to set foot in Oz when he swam up on November 1, where he was immediately spotted by surfers. So far the long distance swimmer has kept mum on the reason for his journey and how long it took him, but that could be down to the fact that the poor guy is malnourished from such an arduous trek! Gus weighed in at 51 lbs, while adult Emperor penguins are typically closer to 100 lbs. Don’t worry, experts are taking care of the little history-maker (including misting sprays of cold water to mimic his home climate) to get him in good health before they discuss next steps with Gus. From People Mag:

An emperor penguin is in recovery after swimming from Antarctica to Australia — a journey of over 2,000 miles.

The bird was discovered on a tourist beach on the country’s southwest coast on Nov. 1, according to a government statement obtained by the Associated Press.

The lone penguin was first spotted by surfer Aaron Fowler, per the Australian newspaper Albany Advertiser.

“We had a look [at] what was going on and there was this big bird in the water, and we thought it was another sea bird,” Fowler told the outlet, adding, “but then it kept coming closer to the shore — and it was way too big — and it just stood up and waddled right over to us.”

The penguin reportedly weighed only 51 lbs — with 55-100 lbs considered normal for the species.

The bird — which has been nicknamed Gus — is currently under the care of local wildlife experts and is being regularly sprayed with chilled water mist to help him cope with his new, significantly warmer climate.

According to Western Australia state’s Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, the goal is to rehabilitate the penguin. Officials are currently unsure whether he will return to Antarctica following his recovery, though “options are still being worked through,” per the AP report.

PEOPLE reached out to Western Australia’s Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions for further details but did not immediately hear back.

According to the Center for Biological Diversity, a nonprofit that works to secure the future of endangered species, emperor penguins are especially impacted by the effects of global warming due to the melting of ice shelves.

“Scientists project that 80% of the world’s emperor penguins may disappear by the end of the century without drastic cuts in carbon pollution,” the org states. “These penguins are also threatened by ocean acidification and industrial fisheries, which further reduce prey availability.”

[From People]

Yeah, I think we all knew the likely cause of Gus’s pilgrimage would be global warming, just like with our unnamed flamingo friend who toured Cape Cod over the summer. People don’t tend to uproot their lives when everything is hunky dory at home.

Still, I gotta say, penguins really are outdoing themselves this year! We have Pesto the Great, the giant baby King penguin chilling in Melbourne as he receives visiting dignitaries ahead of his fledging — which will dwarf him once Gus gets back in shape. Hey, for all we know Gus popped over to meet Pesto! I’m just glad Gus met surfer Aaron Fowler upon crossing the Australian border, because everything Aaron has said to the media is pure gold. Starting with how Gus emerged from the water: “It was kind of funny, like as he came out of the water he went to do a tummy slide, like I guess he’s used to on the ice, and he just did a kind of faceplant in the sand and shook all the sand off and looked a bit shocked,” to how Gus approached him: “He was not afraid of us at all, I think he might have thought we were penguins because of our wet suits.” Bless you, Aaron. I’m sure that’s exactly what Gus was thinking.

photos credit: Wolfgang Jäkel / ImageBROKER / Avalon

Categories
Animals Olivia Rodrigo Penguins

Olivia Rodrigo got to meet Pesto the giant baby penguin



Olivia Rodrigo is currently Down Under for her Guts World Tour, and amid her four-show stop in Melbourne, Olivia carved out some time to meet with a real star. Of course I’m talking about Pesto, the giant baby penguin and greatest specimen of frizzy hair to come out of the Australian city since Kath of Kath & Kim. He’s bigger, taller, and fluffier than his parents, and indeed the largest king penguin chick the Sea Life Melbourne Aquarium has ever seen. Of course pop stars should be coming to pay homage to the king (#TheRealKingOfAustralia). And thankfully for us, the meeting was documented with some floof-tacular photos and videos.

“Thanks for the visit Olivia! Pesto loved meeting another super fan ???? Good luck with the the rest of your Melbourne shows!” Sea Life Melbourne replied to Rodrigo’s post.

Rodrigo also shared two pictures from her visit on her Instagram Stories. She was dressed for the cool temps inside the aquarium’s penguin enclosure.

Pesto is a 10-month-old king penguin and weighs about 46 pounds, according to Sea Life Melbourne’s website. He is the largest chick the aquarium has ever seen and is even larger than his parents. His biological father, Blake, is the aquarium’s biggest adult and oldest penguin.

The penguin is likely to lose weight when he fledges, or when he develops adult feathers. His keepers predict he will weigh around 33 pounds during the process, reports the Associated Press.

“He’s going to start losing that really adorable baby fluff,” Sea Life Melbourne education supervisor Jacinta Early told the AP in September. “It might take him one to two months to really get rid of it. Then he’ll be nice and sleek and streamlined.”

“Pesto has reached more than 1.9 billion people across the globe, so he really is a draw card for visitation to Victoria,” Sea Life Melbourne senior keeper Michaela Smale told 9News in September.

Despite his age, Pesto’s keepers didn’t know he was a boy until last month. King penguins are non-sexually dimorphic, so they do not have visible traits to allow keepers to distinguish their sex. They needed a blood sample to discover Pesto is male. The gender reveal video logged over 1.7 million views on TikTok.

Rodrigo began a four-night stand at Melbourne’s Rod Laver Arena on Oct. 9. On Oct. 17, she will start another four-night stand, this time at Qudos Bank Arena in Sydney. Her Guts World Tour will continue with a group of dates in South America in March.

[From People]

Geez, so the countdown really is on until Pesto fledges and loses his fluff (meanwhile my fledge appears to be nowhere in sight, sigh). And what happens once Pesto matures, will the world just drop him?! We can’t let this happen! Just because he’ll be an adult doesn’t mean he still won’t be able to look indifferent and/or completely uninterested in photos with humans, as he appears in most of the shots with Olivia. But there is one where it looks like he’s talking back to Olivia as she poses with double-handed peace signs. (I’d like to think Pesto was squawking against the resemblance to Richard Nixon’s similar infamous gesture, rather than objecting to the notion of peace itself.) Meanwhile, the babe is only 10-months old and already people are talking about him dating another child star, the only other baby animal of equal fame at the moment, Moo Deng. We have John Stewart to thank for suggesting this relationship into the collective consciousness. I’m not opposed to mixed-species dating, it’s just… can’t we let them be kids?!

obsessed with olivia rodrigo meeting pesto the penguin this is exactly what famous people should be doing pic.twitter.com/4gqTd6LuRn

— Natasha Roy (@natasharoyy) October 11, 2024

Photos via Instagram/YouTube/Twitter and credit: IPA/INSTARimages, FV/Cover Images

Categories
Animals Penguins Weight

Pesto the 50 pound baby penguin is bigger than both of his parents combined



Most parents want their children to exceed them in life; few get to see it realized so quickly, and literally. If you’re not already acquainted with this Aussie, meet Pesto: a 9-month old penguin who lives at the SEA LIFE Melbourne Aquarium with his parents Hudson and Tango. While the adult parents weigh roughly 24 pounds each, their little chicklet already weighs just under 50 pounds, and at three feet is also taller than his folks. It makes for quite the family portrait! Pesto’s caregivers at the aquarium say his robust frame — which is the largest they’ve ever seen in a King penguin chick — is likely a gift from his birth father Blake, their oldest and biggest penguin, and due to simple good parenting from Hudson and Tango. A fruitful marriage of nature and nurture, if you will. Of course, his four meals a day of eight or more hand-fed fish are also helping beef up the growing boy…

An aquarium in Australia is now home to the biggest baby penguin it has ever seen. Pesto, a 9-month-old king penguin, has weighed in at just under 50 pounds — more than the weight of both his parents combined.

Sea Life Melbourne Aquarium has been sharing Pesto’s journey since he hatched on Jan. 30. It didn’t take long for the fluffy baby animal to shock aquarium employees, but also win over their hearts. By April 24, when Pesto was just 3 months old, he already weighed 9.1 kilograms, about 20 pounds. According to the Associated Press, his foster parents Hudson and Tango weigh 11 kg, about 24 pounds, each.

“He eclipses them now, which also makes him look comically large,” Melbourne aquarist Jacinta Early told CBS News’ partner BBC.

By early September, the aquarium said Pesto weighed in at just over 46 pounds, and by the end of the month, the AP said Pesto had reached 49 pounds.

The aquarium says on its website that many factors contribute to Pesto’s “impressive weight.”

“Firstly, his biological dad, Blake, is our biggest and oldest penguin,” the aquarium says on its website. “Secondly, he’s had amazing parents raising him! So, the combination of good genes and good parents explains his current weight, but he will lose a lot of this when he fledges (develops his adult feathers).”

His “very healthy appetite” is also a factor, Early told the BBC. Pesto will eat up to 30 fish that are hand-fed to him every day.

King penguins are the second-largest penguin species in the world, according to the American Bird Conservancy, and will typically fledge when they’re 14 to 16 months old. While male penguins are usually slightly larger than females, the Australian Antarctic Program says that the average penguin size is far below Pesto’s current size, with peak weights ranging between 10 and 15 kg — 22 to 33 pounds — during courting periods.

“If I poked him, my entire finger would completely [disappear] deep in his feathers,” Early said. “When he does start to fledge, he’ll lose a lot of that baby fluff, and he’ll also lose much of that weight, so he’ll slim down nice and sleek.”

Keepers at the aquarium told the Associated Press they expect him to end up at around 33 pounds after he loses “that really adorable baby fluff.”

[From Yahoo! Entertainment]

I would just like to take a minute to acknowledge that we’re in a global moment of obsessing over a giant baby penguin and a pygmy baby hippo. I don’t know what it means or what it portends, but I love it. So, Pesto has five to seven months left of peak fluffitude before his epic molting begins and he goes from child to MAN. I still say he’s gonna be a hefty adult, a real kingpin King penguin! But after spending REDACTED hours watching videos of this floof online, even I have to admit that his waddle walk looks a tad painful! I love my plump furry friends! I just want Pesto to be comfortable. That being said, I’m totally going to adopt “fledge” when referring to my human physique from now on. “No, I’m not fretting over the extra pounds I’ve put on. I’m still waiting to fledge.” Come on people, let’s start trying to make “fledge” happen (until a mean girl tells us to stop).