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All alone... The penguin wandering along Peka Peka Beach in New Zealand on Monday. AP Photo/Richard Gill, Department of Conservation

3,200km off course: Lost penguin taken to New Zealand zoo over health fears

The young Emperor penguin is a long way from his Antarctic home.

Fears over the health of a young Emperor penguin stranded on a New Zealand beach have prompted officials to move it to a local zoo.

The penguin’s rare 2,000-mile (3,200km) journey from Antarctica has captured the imagination of many in the South Pacific and around the world. But veterinarians and conservation officials became concerned enough about the bird that they stepped in Friday.

The penguin, which was first spotted on Monday at Peka Peka Beach on New Zealand’s North Island, had been eating sand and small sticks of driftwood, which it had tried to regurgitate. The penguin appeared to grow more lethargic as the week progressed, and officials feared it would die if they didn’t intervene.

Photo taken on Tuesday of the penguin on Peka Peka Beach. (AP Photo/New Zealand Herald, Mark Mitchell)

Colin Miskelly, a curator at Te Papa, the Museum of New Zealand, said it made sense that a penguin might mistake sand for Antarctic snow, which Emperors eat for hydration, but he had no explanation for the bird eating wood.

Miskelly was one of three experts who helped lift the penguin from the beach into a tub of ice and then onto the back of a truck. Miskelly said he lifted the bird’s rear while the others held its flippers and beak. The bird was docile enough that experts didn’t need to sedate it for the 40-mile (65km) journey to the Wellington Zoo.

Christine Wilton, the local resident who discovered the penguin on Monday while walking her dog, was back at the beach Friday to say goodbye.

“I’m so pleased it’s going to be looked after,” she said. “He needed to get off the beach. He did stand up this morning, but you could tell that he wasn’t happy.”

Miskelly said experts at the zoo were considering sedating the penguin and putting it on an intravenous drip as they tried to nurse it back to health. Ideally, the bird would heal enough that it could be released into the wild, Miskelly said, noting that there were no facilities in New Zealand designed to house an Emperor penguin long-term.

Zoo spokeswoman Kate Baker said veterinarians would give the bird a full health check. The zoo clinic has a salt water pool which has been used in the past to nurse smaller varieties penguin, she said.

Often sick birds require rehabilitation for a month or two before being released, Baker said, adding that some creatures with severe injuries remain in captivity.

Experts believe the penguin is about 10 months old. It stands about 32 inches (80cm) high. Experts haven’t yet determined whether it is male or female.

Emperor penguins are the tallest and largest species of penguin and can grow up to 4 feet (122cm) high and weigh more than 75 pounds (34 kilograms). They typically spend their entire lives in Antarctica. It has been 44 years since an Emperor penguin was last spotted in New Zealand.

- AP

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