NEW ZEALAND – The world’s threatened penguin species live in New Zealand and yet there is no co-ordinated government plan to protect them, New Zealand conservation organisation Forest & Bird has said.
Forest & Bird is joining a global Protect a Penguin campaign to help save penguins and is calling for a national recovery plan to protect New Zealand’s struggling penguin species.
The world’s penguins are in crisis with 10 of out of 18 species at risk of being wiped out. Five of these threatened species live and breed on New Zealand’s mainland and sub-Antarctic islands.
"We are urging the New Zealand government to establish a national Penguin Recovery Group, administered by the Department of Conservation. This group, similar to the very successful Kiwi Recovery Group, would facilitate a more coordinated and collaborative approach to the conservation of all our penguins," said Forest & Bird's CE Kevin Hague.
“Our penguins are in crisis and need help now. New Zealand is home to half the world’s at-risk penguin species and yet the majority don't have a recovery plan in place."
“New Zealand is home to the world’s second rarest penguin, the yellow-eyed penguin/hoiho. Only 1,700 breeding pairs are thought to remain on earth and they are in trouble, with significant declines in the last two to three years. They are being killed in trawl and set nets, and by disease and introduced predators."
"Our Fiordland crested penguin/tawaki, a shy forest-dwelling penguin has an estimated 3,000 breeding pairs remaining. Last summer stoats wiped out an entire colony of 150 breeding pairs at Jackson Head, on the West Coast. They are also threatened by human impacts, including fishing nets, tourism and climate change."
The erect-crested penguin, another endangered New Zealand native, recently disappeared as a breeding species from the sub-Antarctic Campbell Island. It now only breeds on two other island groups and is the least studied penguin in New Zealand.
The Campbell Island population of the eastern rockhopper, once the largest in New Zealand, crashed by 94% over a 45-year period to 1985 and has never recovered.
Together with the other 120 BirdLife partner organisations, with 10 million members worldwide, Forest & Bird is calling on governments to take action and commit to a strategy to help the world’s penguins recover and thrive.
BirdLife’s global penguin campaign launched on 10 April 2017.
Source
New Zealand penguins in crisis [media release], 10 April 2017, Forest & Bird
Forest & Bird is joining a global Protect a Penguin campaign to help save penguins and is calling for a national recovery plan to protect New Zealand’s struggling penguin species.
The world’s penguins are in crisis with 10 of out of 18 species at risk of being wiped out. Five of these threatened species live and breed on New Zealand’s mainland and sub-Antarctic islands.
"We are urging the New Zealand government to establish a national Penguin Recovery Group, administered by the Department of Conservation. This group, similar to the very successful Kiwi Recovery Group, would facilitate a more coordinated and collaborative approach to the conservation of all our penguins," said Forest & Bird's CE Kevin Hague.
“Our penguins are in crisis and need help now. New Zealand is home to half the world’s at-risk penguin species and yet the majority don't have a recovery plan in place."
“New Zealand is home to the world’s second rarest penguin, the yellow-eyed penguin/hoiho. Only 1,700 breeding pairs are thought to remain on earth and they are in trouble, with significant declines in the last two to three years. They are being killed in trawl and set nets, and by disease and introduced predators."
"Our Fiordland crested penguin/tawaki, a shy forest-dwelling penguin has an estimated 3,000 breeding pairs remaining. Last summer stoats wiped out an entire colony of 150 breeding pairs at Jackson Head, on the West Coast. They are also threatened by human impacts, including fishing nets, tourism and climate change."
The erect-crested penguin, another endangered New Zealand native, recently disappeared as a breeding species from the sub-Antarctic Campbell Island. It now only breeds on two other island groups and is the least studied penguin in New Zealand.
The Campbell Island population of the eastern rockhopper, once the largest in New Zealand, crashed by 94% over a 45-year period to 1985 and has never recovered.
Together with the other 120 BirdLife partner organisations, with 10 million members worldwide, Forest & Bird is calling on governments to take action and commit to a strategy to help the world’s penguins recover and thrive.
BirdLife’s global penguin campaign launched on 10 April 2017.
Source
New Zealand penguins in crisis [media release], 10 April 2017, Forest & Bird
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