South African scientists to track penguins in wild

Johannesburg: South African scientists are fitting young penguins raised by humans with satellite transmitters so they can track them once released into the wild, hoping to gather information that might one day lead to new breeding colonies of the endangered birds. Researchers used tape and glue to attach a transmitter the size of a matchbox […]

Johannesburg: South African scientists are fitting young penguins raised by humans with satellite transmitters so they can track them once released into the wild, hoping to gather information that might one day lead to new breeding colonies of the endangered birds.

Researchers used tape and glue to attach a transmitter the size of a matchbox to a 10—week—old African penguin Friday. The 3—kilogram (6.6—pound) bird named Richie will be given a week to get used to swimming in a pool with the 30—gram (1—ounce) device before he’s released into the ocean from the southern tip of Africa. The first penguin in the project was released last month, and in all, five are to be released over a few months.