Cute ‘confused penguin’ hops away with strangers

Cute ‘confused penguin’ hops away with strangers

The penguin (bird) became separated from a penguin group and began hopping away with a bunch of strangers.”

Cute 'confused penguin' hops away with strangers, follow News Without Politics, NWP, non political news source, unbiased, animals, rockhopper penguins

The following written content by Mindy Weisberger 

The little rockhopper nearly hopped away with the wrong group.

If you’ve ever lost track of your friends in a crowd, you’ll likely empathize with the endearingly “confused” rockhopper penguin in a recent viral video. The bird became separated from a penguin group and began hopping away with a bunch of strangers; however, a penguin from the first group seemingly goes back to collect the stray, and everyone enjoyed a very hoppy ending.

The footage was posted on Jan. 9 by The Southern Barlows, a YouTube channel that shares clips of life in the Falkland Islands (also known as Islas Malvinas), according to an account description. The Falklands are an archipelago in the Atlantic Ocean off the southern coast of Argentina, and approximately 320,000 breeding pairs of southern rockhopper penguins (Eudyptes chrysocome chrysocome) gather there annually from October until April, according to Falklands Conservation.

In the short video, one group of penguins bounces energetically downhill, probably going to the sea to fish, said Klemens Pütz, scientific director of the Antarctic Research Trust in Bremervörde, Germany. The mix-up happens when the penguins encounter and briefly mingle with a second group hopping in the opposite direction, likely returning from the ocean and heading back to the breeding colony, Pütz told Live Science.

Rockhoppers arrive at their Falkland Islands breeding grounds in October, and lay their eggs by mid-November, Pütz said. Chicks hatch about a month later and fledge by the end of February. Once breeding season ends, the parents molt and embark on their winter foraging journey. They stay exclusively at sea for six months and swim thousands of miles, dispersing south from coastal waters near the Falklands to the Straits of Magellan and Cape Horn, and to the north along the Patagonian Shelf, Falklands Conservation reported.

Even though the “confused” penguin in the video seems temporarily unable to tell which group is the right one, rockhoppers can identify their mates and chicks among tens of thousands in a colony, said Nicolás Alejandro Lois, a researcher and doctoral candidate at the Institute of Ecology, Genetics and Evolution of Buenos Aires. The birds find each other mostly by using call-and-response vocalizations and visual cues, during which “they stop, stand up straight and turn their heads around,” Lois told Live Science in an email. Read more from Live Science.

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