Posts Tagged ‘Montery Aquaium’

Penguin Find Unlikely Roommates. Sharks.

August 4, 2012

The Penguin Post has learned that a group of African penguins that live on an indoor beach in California have “welcomed” some toothy new neighbors this week: six striped pyjama sharks.

On Tuesday, aquarium biologists at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco introduced the nocturnal sharks (four females and two males) to their neighbors in nature, as both species live in the wild off the South African coast.   The 2-year-old pyjama sharks, which the biologists say are docile and mild-mannered, are expected to spend much of their time in the exhibit’s man-made underwater caves; since the two species rub shoulders in the wild, they should pose no threat to each other.

“During yesterday’s event, the sharks were let into the tank two at a time, which piqued the interest of the penguins,” biologists at the California Academy told the Post, in an email. “The penguins reacted with curiosity, some diving into the water to get a closer look at and feel for their new neighbors. Overall, the penguins reacted quite positively.” As for the sharks, they swam up to the tank’s glass as if posing for photos, before retreating to their cave homes, the biologists added. The African penguin exhibit is modeled after Boulders Beach in South Africa, where the penguins and sharks are found in the wild. The sharks were born at an aquarium in Lisbon, Portugal, in July 2010 before being transported to the Steinhart Aquarium at the Academy a few months ago. So that biologists can monitor the sharks’ feeding, they are using tactics to attract the typically nighttime bottom feeders to the surface for meal times. When hatched, these sharks measure about 5.5 to 5.9 inches in length, growing to about 39 inches as adults. The Academy’s newcomers were about 16 inches long when they arrived at the aquarium. Their aquarium mates, African penguins grow to about 23 to 25 inches tall and can weight 5 to 9 pounds.

Go West Young Penguin

November 3, 2011

The Penguin Post has learned that just in time for winter, six rescued penguins are waddling into the San Francisco Zoo. Three years ago in Brazil nearly 400 Magellanic penguins searching for food became stranded on the beaches hundreds of miles north of their normal feeding grounds. Over the years commercial fishing, combined with oil pollution and climate change have all made it hard for the Magellanics to find food in their usual feeding grounds.  Most of the stranded penguins were returned to the sea, but many ended up at zoo’s and aquariums, and six penguins deemed too weak to survive in the wild on their own were donated from to the Monterey Bay Aquarium who in turn have now donated them to the San Francisco Zoo, bringing its total number at the zoo to 51.  The new penguins will waddle into public view for the first time at 9:30 a.m. Thursday at the zoo’s Penguin Island.

Hanging out with a friend on Penguin Island


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