Express & Star

Baby penguin is first born at park for 44 years

This fluffy chick is the latest arrival at West MIdlands Safari Park – the first to hatch in its 44-year history.

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The new Humboldt penguin chick

Keepers at the safari park in Bewdley were excited by the appearance of an egg on March 9, which hatched five weeks later on April 19, producing a tiny, grey Humboldt penguin chick.

In the wild, Humboldt penguins inhabit the coasts of Peru and Chile and dig burrows into the sand or find small crevices in which to lay eggs.

They may also dig burrows into guano cliffs, which are made up of years of accumulated droppings.

At the park, the keepers have provided the penguins with nest boxes and crevices in which to shelter and lay their eggs.

The penguins started to pair up last year and when an egg is laid, couples will share nest duties, taking it in turns to incubate the egg.

Penguin Keeper, Vicky McFarlane said, “We are over the moon to welcome our first penguin chick to our colony. Mum, Ripple and Dad, Ebony are doing an amazing job and we can’t believe how fast the chick is growing. We have added extra fish to the parents’ diet, which they swallow and partially digest, then regurgitate straight into the chick’s mouth.

“This chick is extra special to us as Humboldt penguins are classified as ‘vulnerable’ in the wild with only 12,000 breeding pairs left.

"This is due to them being historically hunted for meat and their eggs and more recently, the depletion of fish stocks and harvesting of the birds’ guano nests. We hope our other penguin couples follow Ripple and Ebony’s lead and we can welcome some more chicks this year.”

Keepers are now keeping a close eye on the not-yet-named chick and giving it important daily health checks to make sure it is happy and healthy.

This includes weighing the chick to ensure it is putting on weight. It weighed 180 grammes at just a week old and now, at five weeks old, weighs 2,020 grammes.

The penguins first arrived at the Park in 2012 and the colony is made up of 17 adult penguins, which came from zoos in the UK and Germany.