Boulders Beach - Penguins, other birds etc.

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Toko
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Re: Boulders Beach - Penguins, other birds etc.

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Penguins crowding

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Toko
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Re: Boulders Beach - Penguins, other birds etc.

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Penguins in the greenery

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Re: Boulders Beach - Penguins, other birds etc.

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Re: Boulders Beach - Penguins, other birds etc.

Post by nan »

^Q^ ^Q^ ^Q^


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Toko
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Re: Boulders Beach - Penguins, other birds etc.

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The site is also an Important Bird Area (IBA SA117 Boulders Bay)

Site Description:
Boulders Bay is situated in Simon's Town, on the False Bay coast of the Cape Peninsula, 35 km south of Cape Town. The site consists of small beaches holding sandstone boulders and thickets of strandveld vegetation extending approximately 2 ha.

Birds:
African Penguins Spheniscus demersus, which breed beneath the coastal strandveld, colonised Boulders Bay in 1985, when two breeding pairs were recorded. The colony has increased steadily, and there were more than 700 active nests in 1997. This is one of only three mainland breeding sites in the world. Small numbers of Crowned Cormorant Phalacrocorax coronatus occasionally roost on the rocks and African Black Oystercatcher Haematopus moquini are occasionally seen along the beach. Cape Spurfowl Pternistis capensis and Cape Bulbul Pycnonotus capensis are strandveld residents. Cape Sugarbird Promerops cafer occasionally visit from the slopes above the beach.

Conservation issues:
This area has recently been incorporated into the Table Mountain National Park, and is under the jurisdiction of National Parks Board. The African Penguin population at Boulders Bay has been increasing steadily since it was first colonised in 1985. This is one of the few growing colonies in the world, and it is thought that birds may be relocating here from Dyer Island (IBA SA120) where the population has decreased markedly since the mid-1980s.

Competition with commercial fisheries, especially purse-seining for surface-shoaling fish such as Pilchard Sardinops sagax, has been implicated as one of the most significant factors causing the global population decline of the African Penguin. The penguins may be relocating to Boulders Bay and Robben Island (SA IBA110) because of the restrictions on purse-seine fishing in False and Table Bay respectively. It has been speculated that the localised protection of their food resources may allow for improved breeding success and survival.

Birds breed primarily under the strandveld vegetation, but will breed on the beach and in every available rock crevice. Threats at Boulders include predation by Feral Cats Felis catus and Smallspotted Genet Genetta genetta. Although disturbance by tourists may be a problem, the penguins at this site are remarkably tame and the colony continues to increase in numbers and size despite exposure to large numbers of people. Measures to control excessive disturbance by visitors are being implemented. The education value of the site is immense and many thousands of visitors come here for the express purposes of viewing penguins. The education and tourism potential is massive, and it remains largely untapped.

African Penguins at Boulders have developed a habit of sheltering under cars in the parking lot, and vehicular traffic has been known to disturb and kill penguins. Awareness campaigns and measures to reduce this unnecessary mortality are essential.

Another problem which is difficult to predict or control is chronic pollution by crude oil or other environmental pollutants when tankers break open, tank wash, dump cargo or pump bilge. Penguins are affected particularly badly by these activities and a single oil disaster can severely affect populations. The Apollo Sea oil-spill disaster in the late 1980s resulted in many Globally near-threatened penguin deaths in and around the Cape Peninsula. The South African National Foundation for the Conservation of Coastal Birds (SANCCOB) has cleaned, rehabilitated and returned some 3 000 penguins to the wild between 1981 and 1991.

Key Species:
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Re: Boulders Beach - Penguins, other birds etc.

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This is very good! Thanks, Lis! O0


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Toko
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Re: Boulders Beach - Penguins, other birds etc.

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Quite how one of the most abundant birds in the Benguela has been brought to the brink of extinction makes for sobering reading.
Ryan, P. 2012. African Penguins. African Birdlife 1(1):30-31.


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Lisbeth
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Re: Boulders Beach - Penguins, other birds etc.

Post by Lisbeth »

First it was bad because nobody cared for conservation and were only thinking of their stomach, then it got better as conservation started to be important (at least for some), then it got bad again, because very few cared about a few penguins and see what has happened :-(


"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." Nelson Mandela
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge
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Re: Boulders Beach - Penguins, other birds etc.

Post by Richprins »

Image

Avian (Bird Flu) outbreak confirmed at Boulders Penguin Colony

20 March 2018

Table Mountain management would like to alert the public that several cases of bird flu in the penguin colony at Boulders have been confirmed by state veterinary services. It is reiterated that this virus is a very low risk to humans, but is a real threat to domestic poultry. This strain of avian influenza virus (H5N8 strain) has been detected in a range of wild seabirds e.g. swift, sandwich and common terns, African penguins and gannets.

The park is monitoring the situation closely and has now implemented the following precautions

With the exception of visitors on Boulders Beach boardwalk, nobody may access the main breeding colony.
In instances where staff need to go off boardwalks to collect injured birds or hats, camera lens, caps etc dropped by visitors they will limit their access to essential work and then sterilise their boots afterwards - gum boots have been issued and are easier to clean than the normal boot.
Monitoring routes used for moult/nest counts have been reviewed to ensure that staff and Penguin monitors do not walk through the main breeding colony.

Western Cape Veterinary Services, CapeNature, SANParks, the national Department of Environmental Affairs, City of Cape Town, SANCCOB and other seabird rehabilitation centres and private veterinarians are working in close cooperation to monitor the situation and perform further testing.

The Western Cape is most affected. The virus is spread from bird to bird, by contaminated bird faeces and other body excretions, and by handling sick birds. Even though the virus is unlikely to infect humans, precautions should nevertheless be taken. Gloves, shoes, clothes, and other protective gear should be worn if handling birds.

Any equipment including vehicles and protective clothing that could possibly be contaminated should be sterilised.

While the virus is highly pathogenic to chickens and other poultry, the impact on wild seabirds is not that well understood (so far 1 tern and 2 penguins from Boulders have come back positive for H5N8). Closing the colony to visitors is not justified at this stage.

Tips for visitors
Visitors must stay on designated board walks
Visitors should change shoes and clothes if visiting other seabird colonies or poultry farms to prevent contamination from one site to another.


https://www.sanparks.org/about/news/?id=57449


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Flutterby
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Re: Boulders Beach - Penguins, other birds etc.

Post by Flutterby »

Not good! :no:


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