HK penguins chill during pandemic while carers work overtime

AFP
Save for an absence of gawping crowds, life for the penguins of Ocean Park in Hong Kong has been much the same during the pandemic, but their carers have worked long shifts.
AFP

Save for an absence of gawping crowds, life for the penguins of Ocean Park in Hong Kong has been much the same during the coronavirus pandemic — but their carers have worked long shifts to keep the monochrome troupe healthy.

Piles of fresh snow have been laid out as some 100 penguins excitedly gather for the mid-morning feeding session.

Usually, this daily ritual at the South Pole Spectacular would be a major draw. But the park is still shut because of the coronavirus outbreak.

“If the guests are here, certainly they would be more interactive with the guests through the window, but without guests, we can do ... more enrichment sessions with the penguins,” explained Frank Chau, the park’s senior marine mammal supervisor.

“They can still have fun.”

Since the pandemic began, Chau and his colleagues have split into two teams working three-day shifts to look after the penguins.

Both teams have been strictly separated from each other — a measure to ensure that if one team was quarantined because of a positive test result, the other group could continue to give specialist care.

“The manpower for each team is lower. Now we got only three to four people every day to take care of all the penguins and make sure every penguin is still living happily and healthily both mentally and physically,” Chau said.

On a typical day, Chau starts with cleaning and disinfection before firing up the snow machines that help recreate the Antarctic conditions in warm and humid Hong Kong.

He then prepares food and conducts health checks like weighing the birds and trimming their claws.

To keep the penguins entertained, the team builds toys, including floating ice boards and a perforated box filled with fish and krill, to encourage underwater foraging.

Last month, a zoo in Singapore used the pandemic lockdown to give its troupe of African penguins the run of the park in a video that quickly went viral.

But Chau said Ocean Park’s penguins cannot leave their frigid enclosure. “The species here are mainly from the sub-Antarctica region, they need a cooler environment... especially during the summertime in Hong Kong, (when) we will have a very high temperature.”

Ocean Park, which is earmarked for a 10.6-billion Hong Kong dollar (US$1.4 billion) bailout from the government, has been shuttered since late January because of the pandemic.

The date for reopening is still up in the air.

HK penguins chill during pandemic while carers work overtime
AFP

King penguins get fed in their enclosure at Hong Kong’s Ocean Park theme park, which is currently closed due to the COVID-19 outbreak. Save for an absence of gawping crowds, life for the penguins has been much the same during the virus pandemic — but their carers have worked long shifts to keep the monochrome troupe healthy. 


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