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Meet the Columbus Zoo’s newest Humbolt penguin chick with a big personality

<i>Amanda Carberry/Columbus Zoo and Aquarium</i><br/>The penguin chick is being hand-reared by zoo keepers due to the ongoing avian influenza.
Columbus Zoo and Aquarium
Amanda Carberry/Columbus Zoo and Aquarium
The penguin chick is being hand-reared by zoo keepers due to the ongoing avian influenza.

By Zoe Sottile, CNN

The Columbus Zoo welcomed the birth of a “cute bundle of feather floof,” as one keeper described the zoo’s newborn Humbolt penguin.

The zoo, located in Powell, Ohio, announced the fuzzy newborn had been born on March 20 in a tweet Wednesday. The tweet included photos of the tiny chick getting fed and examined by staff — who also took blood samples for a DNA test. As penguin sexes closely resemble one another, a blood test is needed to determine gender.

The Columbus Zoo has been active in breeding Humbolt penguins through the American Species Survival Plan, a national breeding program that encourages zoos to maintain genetic diversity within vulnerable and endangered species. The species is considered “vulnerable” by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

For now, the zoo’s latest addition is being hand-reared by the animal care team, staff told CNN.

“Normally we absolutely love for the parents to do the work raising chicks, because there’s no better parent than the actual penguins themselves,” said Joy Kotheimer, one of the penguin keepers caring for the chick. “However, the avian influenza has just thrown us for a loop.”

The avian influenza (HPAI) A(H5N1) virus is very contagious among birds, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, though it poses a low risk to humans. Cases of avian flu have been rising in backyard flocks and wild birds across dozens of states in recent months.

As a result, the Columbus Zoo has moved all of its birds indoors, as have other zoos across the country.

Kotheimer explained that after moving the colony of 16 adult Humbolt penguins indoors, there wasn’t appropriate space for the penguins to nest. “The environment for raising a chick just wasn’t good,” she said.

When the chick first hatched, it had to be fed fish formula mixed by the zoo’s animal nutrition department every three hours. Now a month old, the infant has graduated to eating whole fish just three times a day. The little one is “a great eater,” Kotheimer noted, and currently weighs 3.5 pounds (it’ll reach 8 to 10 by adulthood).

Keepers are also making sure the little one gets to know what other penguins are like despite being raised by humans. Zoo staff show the chick a video they recorded of the adult Humbolt penguins on an iPad so it is exposed to penguin noises. “I don’t know what they’re saying — hopefully good things,” said Kotheimer.

“We try to spend time preening the feathers, doing what parents would do, interacting with it. It’s really to the age — where it’s like a toddler, where it’s starting to really be interested in things, textures, it looks at the numbers on the scale when we weigh it,” she said. “We’re starting to see its personality – or its penguinality.”

The chick will likely be introduced to the rest of the colony in another month, when its current coating of fluffy down is replaced by waterproof juvenile feathers. There, the youngster will need to practice swimming and learn “what’s acceptable in the penguin world,” according to Kotheimer.

The newest chick is the 35th Humbolt penguin the zoo has hatched since 1996, says Kotheimer.

The penguins are “highly affected” by fluctuations in the fish population, such as those caused by overfishing, around Chile and Peru, where they live in the wild, Kotheimer explained. “As we’re facing more challenges, we’re going to see their numbers be affected more,” she said.

The Humbolt penguins are not currently visible to viewers, but the zoo hopes to reevaluate the avian influenza situation in May and determine whether the birds can be safely moved back to their exhibit yards, said Kotheimer.

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