A fire broke out early Saturday morning in the bird park Avifauna in Alphen aan den Rijn, the Netherlands. The cause of the fire was unknown. The fire claimed the lives of approximately 20 birds, according to police. Surviving birds have been moved to temporary housing. Among the dead were parakeets and cockatoos.
Baby Penguin Stolen From British Zoo
A baby Jackass penguin was stolen from the Amazon World Zoo on the Isle of Wight on Monday. The three-month-old penguin, named Togo, cannot survive for more than three or four days without his parents, on whom he relies for his special diet. He was known to refuse food from humans. Togo has lived in an enclosure at the zoo with his parents, Kyala and Oscar, and four other penguins, since he was born in September. If he is not returned to the zoo by Thursday, his chances for survival are slim.
Zoo officials speculate that the penguin may have been taken to be used as a Christmas gift for someone, and that the popularity of the French movie March of the Penguins may have sparked this misguided idea.
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Who’s p-p-picked up our penguin?
STOLEN PENGUIN’S LIFE AT RISK, SAY ZOO
Keepers Fear Penguin Was Snatched as Gift
Coastal Birds Threatened By Power Station Waste
More than a thousand wading birds could be uprooted from their homes if a plan to dump power station waste in coastal lagoons goes ahead in Scotland. The ScottishPower station has stored ash in the lagoons for over 40 years. The plan is to remove the ash to clear space for waste. Read more at the Scotsman.com News.
Peregrine Falcon Dies After Surviving Wing Surgery
An 8-month-old peregrine falcon that hatched in downtown Cleveland earlier this year has died one week after undergoing wing surgery. The young bird, which fledged from its nest on Terminal Tower in June, had surgery to repair a broken wing on 10 December. The injured bird was brought to the Back to the Wild rehabilitation center, where vets inserted two pins into the bird’s wing bones. The falcon survived the surgery and was well enough to eat live food shortly after the operation, but the stress of captivity was too great on the wild animal and it stopped eating. Read more from The Plain Dealer.
Siberian Cranes Shun Indian Sanctuary For China
The endangered Siberian Crane, whose population has been dwindling since 1971, traditionally migrates from its Russian summer home to warmer climes in the winter months. This season, Siberian Cranes have failed to arrive at the Keoladeo Bird Sanctuary in Bharatpur, India for the third straight year. Two hundred cranes wintered in Bharatpur as recently as 1964. The birds now prefer Chinese wetlands for their winter home. A map by BirdLife International shows the winter and summer habitats of these endangered birds, which live in two recognized colonies.
Related links:
International Crane Foundation
Siberian Crane Wetland Project
Domino Sparrow Secured By Dutch Museum
The Domino Sparrow was handed over to the Natural History Museum of Rotterdam on Thursday, 15 December. Read more about it on the museum’s website.
Domino Sparrow To Be Preserved For Science
The sparrow that was killed last month in the Netherlands after it knocked over 24.000 dominoes will be preserved and exhibited in the Natural History Museum of Rotterdam. Read more on the museum’s website.
R.I.P. Domino Sparrow
Yesterday the frozen body of the “domino sparrow” arrived at her final resting place, the Rotterdam Nature Museum. The sparrow, a female, was shot dead on 14 November after knocking over some dominoes prior to Domino Day. The sparrow will eventually be displayed at the museum in part of a larger exhibit on sparrows.
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Plump Penguins Waddle Off Extra Kilos
It’s natural for king penguins to add extra weight during the winter months; it helps them cope with the severe climate of their surroundings. But zookeppers at the Asahiyama Zoo in Japan keep their penguins fit by taking them for walks twice a day. Read more about it at CNN.com.
Stoned Owl Hides Out In Family Christmas Tree
An owl high on marijuana is found in a family’s Christmas tree.
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