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Endangered African Penguins, With Multiple Bee Stings, Are Found Dead (nytimes.com) 33

More than 60 endangered African penguins were recently found dead, all with multiple bee stings and no other external injuries, according to officials in a coastal city in South Africa where the birds regularly migrate. From a report: Sixty-three dead African penguins were found Friday at the Boulders Penguin Colony, in Simon's Town, about 25 miles south of Cape Town, in the southwest of the country. All the penguins had multiple bee stings, and "many dead bees were found at the site where the birds had died," according to a statement from the South African National Parks. "Therefore preliminary investigations suggest that the penguins died because of being stung by a swarm of Cape honey bees."

No external physical injuries were observed on any of the dead penguins, the statement said. The penguins migrate to the area annually. The bees found near the dead birds are native to the area, "usually coexist with wildlife" and "don't sting unless provoked," according to Dr. Alison Kock, a marine biologist at the South African National Parks. "We have never had a problem like this before," she said. The penguins had been stung around the eyes and on their flippers, areas not covered by feathers, Dr. Kock said.

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Endangered African Penguins, With Multiple Bee Stings, Are Found Dead

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  • Addy-the-Pooh? (Score:2, Informative)

    by nospam007 ( 722110 ) *

    What else could it be?

    Unfortunately I'll never know, since I can't possibly RTFA nor TFS.

  • story is paywalled (Score:5, Informative)

    by v1 ( 525388 ) on Tuesday September 21, 2021 @03:44PM (#61818361) Homepage Journal

    anyone got an open link? articles with paywalled main stories shouldn't get posted here.

    • by know-nothing cunt ( 6546228 ) on Tuesday September 21, 2021 @03:47PM (#61818377)

      More than 60 endangered African penguins were recently found dead, all with multiple bee stings and no other external injuries, according to officials in a coastal city in South Africa where the birds regularly migrate.

      Sixty-three dead African penguins were found Friday at the Boulders Penguin Colony, in Simon’s Town, about 25 miles south of Cape Town, in the southwest of the country.

      All the penguins had multiple bee stings, and “many dead bees were found at the site where the birds had died,” according to a statement from the South African National Parks. “Therefore preliminary investigations suggest that the penguins died because of being stung by a swarm of Cape honey bees.”

      No external physical injuries were observed on any of the dead penguins, the statement said.

      The penguins migrate to the area annually. The bees found near the dead birds are native to the area, “usually coexist with wildlife” and “don’t sting unless provoked,” according to Dr. Alison Kock, a marine biologist at the South African National Parks.

      “We have never had a problem like this before,” she said.

      The penguins had been stung around the eyes and on their flippers, areas not covered by feathers, Dr. Kock said.

      “The feathers over the penguin’s body are densely packed and it’s unlikely the bees stings could have penetrated through these feathers,” Dr. Kock said in an email. “On the other hand, the skin around the eyes and flippers have no feathers and the stings could penetrate in those regions.”

      Tests are underway to determine if a toxin or a disease was a factor in the penguins’ deaths, park officials said. So far, officials believe the bees’ nest was disturbed, causing “a mass of bees to flee the nest, swarm and they became defensive and aggressive,” Dr. Kock said. “Unfortunately the bees encountered a group of penguins on their flight path.”

      African penguins are an endangered species with a population of only about 41,700 adults, as of 2020, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Threatened Species.

      The birds live mainly in coastal areas of Namibia and South Africa, according to the African Wildlife Foundation, and can reach up to 28 inches in height and 11 pounds in weight. They come ashore to breed, shed old feathers and rest.

      Two oil spills, in 1994 and 2000, killed around 30,000 penguins, according to the foundation.

      The birds’ population has been decreasing because overfishing has reduced their source of food, according to Oceana, a conservation group.

      But the penguins are gaining wider recognition.

      The African penguins’ summer migration to Simon’s Town was recently featured in a Netflix documentary, “Penguin Town,” narrated by the actor Patton Oswalt.

      “Some penguins may be emperors,” Mr. Oswalt says. “In this place, they are gods.”

    • Dear Slashdot (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      I'm a moron and can't take 5 seconds to open a new tab and paste the url into https://archive.is/ [archive.is]

      Instead I'd rather waste more time to lodge a complaint.

    • If you aren't a subscriber, why do you allow them to set cookies on your browser?

  • by grave367 ( 6314720 ) on Tuesday September 21, 2021 @03:50PM (#61818385) Homepage
    https://archive.ph/cyfhc [archive.ph]

    Seriously, paywalled submissions should be banned, or at least handled properly by editing staff.
    Do ya jobs.
    • This is the way. I also like longer format: {{cite web | title = Endangered African Penguins, With Multiple Bee Stings, Are Found Dead | url = https://www.nytimes.com/2021/0... [nytimes.com] | date = 2021-09-21 | archiveurl = http://archive.today/cyfhc [archive.today] | archivedate = 2021-09-21 }}
    • Because *holy crap* paying for quality journalism is a frigging crime. Or should everything be free as in speech?

      • by Bodie1 ( 1347679 )

        Key phrase: quality journalism.

      • by skogs ( 628589 )

        You've got to realize that the New York Times doesn't have a full time guy sitting in south africa for wildlife stories right? This was pulled from another news source, word for word...who published it prior to the NYT getting a hold of it.
        One story in India thebharatexpressnews.com
        One story in Australia bestinau.net

        Curiously only the NYT has a credited writer. Perhaps their legal team needs to catch up on copyright infringement. ... unless the publish dates seem to be sooner in the other articles...even

    • Isn't it your own job to set your browser to block cookies you don't need?

  • People think nature don't be like that, but it do.
  • Were these the hyper aggressive African honey bees we've been hearing about since the 70's?

    Also, I never knew there was such a thing as African Penguins.

    • Took the typing right out of my fingers. I guess those African honey bees really are mean as hell. And South Africa... it really is pretty south but not quite approaching the south pole. But it gets snow once in a while, which just doesn't seem right from my very pop culture TV/movie knowledge of the place. https://www.distance.to/South-... [distance.to] compare to Oregon and the North Pole... https://www.distance.to/Oregon... [distance.to]

    • Penguins are not just in Antarctica, although the particular species that live there need to be in the cold environment. There are warm-weather (even tropical) penguins as well. There are penguins in Africa, Australia, South America, and even the Galapagos islands which are very close to the equator. The one thing that they have in common isn't climate, it's that they all live in the southern hemisphere. There are no penguins in the northern hemisphere (except perhaps in zoos). I cringe every time I see Chr

    • There are penguins in the tropics. African penguins are also known as jackass penguins, because of their braying-like noise.

    • Just plain old African bees. They are more aggressive. Just think of European and North American bees as docile.
      • by Nkwe ( 604125 )

        Just plain old African bees. They are more aggressive. Just think of European and North American bees as docile.

        How does their unladen ground speed compare?

    • No, they're
      Apis mellifera capensis (Cape honey bees).

      "Killer" Africanized bees are crossbreds of
      Apis mellifera scutellata (East African lowland honey bees)
      with various European honey bee subspecies such as
      Apis mellifera ligustica (Italian honey bee) and
      Apis mellifera iberiensis (Iberian honey bee).

      See https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cape_and_African_Honey_Bee_range.svg [wikimedia.org] where the Cape honey bees are in the green area.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    By Azi Paybarah
    Sept. 21, 2021, 5:28 a.m. ET

    More than 60 endangered African penguins were recently found dead, all with multiple bee stings and no other external injuries, according to officials in a coastal city in South Africa where the birds regularly migrate.

    Sixty-three dead African penguins were found Friday at the Boulders Penguin Colony, in Simon’s Town, about 25 miles south of Cape Town, in the southwest of the country.

    All the penguins had multiple bee stings, and “many dead bees were fou

  • Were the bees Africanized? :)

  • "A dead penguin was also found on Friday on nearby Fish Hoek which had also suffered multiple bee-stings, according to SANParks." https://www.bbc.com/news/world... [bbc.com] Fish Hoek is about 10 km from Boulders Beach .

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