Japan's escaped penguin recaptured after 82 days on the run | World news | guardian.co.uk
well, that’s a fucking bummer
well, that’s a fucking bummer
Escaped Penguin Suspected of Pranking Tokyo Zoo
Monday, 21 May 2012
The Humboldt Penguin whose daring escape from Tokyo’s Sea Life Park in March, which shocked the world, is now suspected of pranking Tokyo Zoo. The Penguin, named Penguin No.13, who looks no different than Penguins 1 through 12, threw himself over a 13 foot wall by using a catapult that was cleverly made of herrings. Penguins 1 through 12 were supposed to follow but their appetites got the best of them and they ended up eating the catapult instead. Penguin No. 13, who has now been on the lam for 2 months and is believed to be using an alias, has been suspected in a number of pranks that have been taking place at the zoo.
Explained to Tokyo Zookeeper:
“I tell you things have been really weird around here lately. I mean we had this really short guy dressed as a Tibetan Monk claiming to be the Dalai Lama and handing out herrings to everyone. I swear the guy must have been less than two feet tall. I just don’t remember the Dalai Lama being so small and having such long beak. Hell, when I went to shake his hand he didn’t even have any fingers. He just looks so different on TV”.
You would have to ask the penguin, wouldn’t you?
A fugitive penguin that has been on the run for two months since escaping from a Tokyo aquarium has been caught on camera swimming happily in Tokyo Bay.
Authorities say the humboldt penguin, known only as number 337, looks healthy and happy in the video, and believe it has been gorging itself on small fish in the bay.
Two months on the run, and swim, do not seem to have harmed number 337 at all, says deputy director of the Tokyo Sea Life Park Kazuhiro Sakamoto.
“It didn’t look like it has got thinner over the last two months - or been without food,” he says.
“It doesn’t seem to be any weaker. So it looks like it’s been living quite happily in the middle of Tokyo Bay.”
In March, 337 scaled a sheer rock face 4m high, and then skirted a barbed-wire fence in a bid for freedom.
He flipped on-lookers his version of ‘the bird’ and despite hundreds of sightings, some even genuine, has been on loose ever since. But authorities are now closing in.
“You can see it’s got the same ring round its flipper and identical facial patterns. So I definitely think that it’s the same penguin as the one that escaped the aquarium in March,” Mr Sakamoto says.
Residents are divided on whether 337 should continue his life on the run.
Hobby fisherman Michio Arimi says the penguin could be enjoying himself.
“It’s a big stretch of water, so for a penguin it’s eat-all-you-want. And you know, the water’s a good temperature too. But you’d really have to ask the penguin, wouldn’t you?”
But graphic designer Tateki Futagami is slightly worried about 337.
“Well you know they say there’s radiation in there, so I’ve got my fingers crossed that the penguin can live in Tokyo Bay safely.”
(via Views divided over safety of Japan penguin - Story - World - 3 News)
A penguin which escaped from Tokyo’s Sea Life Park has reportedly been spotted swimming in waters around the Japanese capital.
The one-year-old Humboldt - which fled its enclosure in March - was caught on video near Tokyo’s Rainbow Bridge, according to Reuters news agency.
A Sea Life Park official identified it as the escapee, recognising a distinctive ring round a flipper.
“It looks like it’s been living quite happily,” Kazuhiro Sakamoto said.
“It didn’t look like it has got thinner over the last two months - or been without food,” he added.
(via BBC News - Japan penguin escapee ‘spotted’ in Tokyo Bay)
Staff at Tokyo Sea Life Park announced they stopped searching for a penguin that escaped last month, as they failed to obtain any credible clues on the bird’s whereabouts. “Although we believe the penguin is doing OK somewhere in a river near Tokyo Bay, we don’t know what else to do after nearly a month of searching,” said a representative of the park. The penguin may have moved to an area away from the park, which makes it more difficult for the search operation, as Tokyo Bay is rather big, the park official said. “We hope to get fresh sightings in August, when the bird molts and its adult black-and-white feathers emerge because it will be easier for ordinary people to recognize it as a penguin,” he added. The one-year-old penguin escaped from an enclosure where it lived with 134 other penguins of the same kind, Humboldt. It apparently escalated a sheer rock twice its size.
(via Search for escaped Tokyo penguin stopped after a month - The Tokyo Times)
Baby Penguin Chicknappers Caught and ‘Dirk’ is Rescued
Dirk, a fairy penguin stolen from an Australian marine park, has been safely returned, but not before being hounded by a dog and chased by another animal, possibly a shark.
Police allege three young men broke into Sea World on Queensland’s Gold Coast on Saturday night, swam in the dolphin enclosure and then stole seven-year-old Dirk as they made their escape.
Staff at Tokyo Sea Life Park said Thursday they are no longer combing riverbanks every day looking for any sign of the creature, which fled captivity in early March. “Although we believe the penguin is doing okay somewhere in a river near Tokyo Bay, we don’t know what else to do after nearly a month of searching,” the park’s Takashi Sugino told AFP. “Maybe it moved to an area far away from the park, in which case it’s hard for us to find as Tokyo Bay is rather big.” Keepers have asked birdwatchers for help in tracking down the escapee but despite an initial flurry of news, they have received no credible information for some time.
This is no more news about the penguin that escaped from the Tokyo Zoo last March. I emailed the zoo three times requesting information about the penguin and have not received a reply. Perhaps they fear that have lost their zoo face or something.
The penguin is either free or dead.
Or free and dead.
Nightmare zoo in Indonesia shaken by giraffe death
By TRISNADI MARJAN, Associated Press – Mar 13, 2012 SURABAYA, Indonesia (AP) —
The tigers are emaciated and the 180 pelicans packed so tightly they cannot unfurl their wings without hitting a neighbor. Last week, a giraffe died with a beachball-sized wad of plastic food wrappers in its belly.
That death has focused new attention on the scandalous conditions at Indonesia’s largest zoo. Set up nearly a century ago in one the most biologically diverse corners of the planet, it once boasted the most impressive collection in Southeast Asia.
But today the Surabaya Zoo is a nightmare, plagued by uncontrolled breeding, a lack of funding for general animal welfare and even persistent suspicions that members of its own staff are involved in illegal wildlife trafficking.
The rarest species, including Komodo dragons and critically endangered orangutans, sit in dank, unsanitary cages, filling up on peanuts tossed over the fence by giggling visitors.
“This is extremely tragic, but of course by no means surprising in Indonesia’s zoos, given the appalling way they are managed on the whole,” said Ian Singleton, a former zookeeper who now runs an orangutan conservation program on Sumatra island.
The zoo came under heavy fire two years ago following reports that 25 of its 4,000 animals were dying every month, almost all of them prematurely. They included an African lion, a Sumatran tiger and several crocodiles.
The government appointed an experienced zookeeper, Tony Sumampouw, to clean up the operation and he struggled, with some success, to bring the mortality rate down to about 15 per month.
But following last week’s death of the 30-year-old giraffe “Kliwon” — who had for years been eating litter and trash thrown into its pen and was found with a 18-kilogram (40-pound) ball of plastic in its stomach — Sumampouw said he’s all but given up.
Nothing short of a “total renovation” is needed, he said.
“We need to either think about privatizing or transferring out some of the animals.”
With entrance fees of less than $2, critics say there’s not enough money to care for the animals, much less invest in improving the zoo’s facilities.
One of the biggest problems is overcrowding.
Whereas most zoos limit the number of animals born in captivity — taking into consideration how many can reasonably be cared for or exchanged with other zoos — the notion of “family planning” has not yet taken off here. Contraceptives are expensive and there are not adequate facilities to separate males and females. As result, species at the Surabaya zoo are bred to excess.
The 180 pelicans are kept in a pen the size of a volleyball court. Nearby, 16 tigers — 12 Sumatran and four Bengalese — are kept in a prison-like row of concrete cages.
One white tiger, whose parents were donated by the Indian government nearly 20 years ago, is now covered by skin lesions.
Let out so rarely, she suffers from back complications that make it difficult to just stand up, let alone walk, zoo curator Sri Pentawati said.
“There are too many tigers,” she lamented. “We have a hard time rotating them out to get all the exercise they need.”
Rahmat Shah — a well known big-game hunter with a museum in the city of Medan that is filled with rhinos, big cats and other animals he’s shot around the world — currently heads Indonesia’s National Zoo Association. He says none of the zoos run by the government are in good condition, but that Surabaya is especially troubled, due to a bitter internal rift.
Two men who each claimed to be the zoo’s chief were fired several years ago, but their followers among the staff have continued the feud.
Police believe the poisoning death of a Javan warthog in January, found with traces of cyanide in its stomach, was linked to that conflict.
“One side is always trying to discredit the other,” said Ludvie Achmad, head of a local conservation agency.
Sumampouw acknowledged he has had little success in controlling the undisciplined staff.
He said he believes some animals, including three young Komodos that disappeared last year, were stolen by caretakers and sold into the exotic pet trade.
Zookeepers also have been accused of taking meat meant for the tigers and selling it in the local market.
Associated Press writer Ali Kotarumalos in Jakarta contributed to this report.
Dear Tokyo Zoo,
Is the penguin still missing? What is its status?
Thank You.
Tokyo Searches for Escaped Penguin
Tokyo residents should be on the lookout for a 1-year-old penguin today. The bird was recently seen swimming in a river mouth in the capital after apparently scaling an aquarium wall and escaping. “We first noticed the penguin might have fled when the director of a neighboring zoo emailed us Sunday with a photo,” said an aquarium official, referring to the photo of the swimming penguin. He said officials were unable to capture it because it swam “at a tremendous speed.”
Tokyo police are on the hunt for a fugitive. He’s neither armed nor dangerous, but they predict he has quite a penchant for fish.
(via Penguin on the Lam: Tuxedoed Fugitive Escapes from Tokyo Zoo | NewsFeed | TIME.com)
The AFP reports that the penguin “scaled a sheer rock face to escape from a Tokyo zoo. As one official at the aquarium said, “Of course it can’t fly, but sometimes wildlife have an ‘explosive’ power when frightened by something. Maybe it ran up the rock after being surprised… It’s a bit of a struggle to catch it when it is swimming, because it swims at a tremendous speed.”
(via Tokyo’s Escaped Penguin Is a Speed Demon - Global - The Atlantic Wire)