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The road to recovery
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The road to recovery

Helping save the African Penguin

SOUTH AFRICA: Acknowledging World Penguin Day, it’s worth celebrating the work being done to help save the African penguin which faces extinction and threats to its habitat that includes a shortage of food.

Recent months have seen a surge in abandoned penguin eggs and chicks, driven by food shortages and extreme weather conditions. SANCCOB teams, working closely with conservation authorities, rescue these eggs and chicks for incubation, rearing and rehabilitation, significantly improving their chances of survival.

Located along South Africa’s south-eastern coastline, Algoa Bay is home to globally important penguin colonies on St Croix and Bird Island, making conservation efforts in this region vital to the species’ future.

Through the Ford Wildlife Foundation, Ford South Africa provides SANCCOB with a locally built Ford Ranger Double Cab 4x4, enabling the team to access remote coastal areas, transport rescued birds, and respond rapidly to emergencies. The Ranger plays a crucial role in supporting daily operations and ensuring that resources can be directed towards animal care rather than logistics.

This partnership is especially significant in Gqeberha, the city where Ford’s journey in South Africa began more than a century ago and home to its engine plant today.

In addition to ongoing support, SANCCOB recently hosted its “Cheers for Chicks” initiative ahead of World Penguin Day, raising funds for the care and survival of endangered penguin chicks.

With support from the Ford Wildlife Foundation, SANCCOB is responding to record numbers of abandoned African penguin eggs and chicks, driven by food shortages and extreme heat conditions.

When the nests fall silent

This year, SANCCOB, dedicated to reversing the decline in seabird populations in South Africa, has seen record numbers of abandoned eggs arrive at its centres. The reasons are stark.

Adult penguins are struggling to find food, forcing one parent to stay away from the nest for too long. In other cases, extreme heat drives adults to abandon their eggs to save their own lives. Climate change and food shortages are taking a visible toll.

When eggs are left behind, SANCCOB’s rangers monitor the colonies closely. Once permission is granted, these eggs are carefully rescued and transported for artificial incubation, giving them a chance at survival.

In the Eastern Cape, flooding events have added to the crisis. In one instance, 46 chicks were rescued after nests were washed away, separating them from their parents and leaving them with no safe place to return to.

Without intervention, many of these chicks and eggs would not survive.

The Ranger in action

From the outside, it may look like just another vehicle. On the ground, it becomes something far more.

It transports rescued chicks and eggs from remote island colonies to safety. It supports rapid response to injured or oiled seabirds along the Eastern Cape coast and it keeps daily operations moving reliably and efficiently in challenging conditions.

For SANCCOB, that matters. Every resource saved on logistics can be redirected towards feeding, veterinary care, and rehabilitation.

When working against the clock, reliability is essential.

Vehicles support the work, but people drive conservation. On Bird Island, SANCCOB’s seabird monitors are often the first responders, working with SANParks to assess and stabilise birds before transport. That early intervention improves survival rates significantly.

It is meticulous, demanding work. And it never stops. SANCCOB operates 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, and has saved more than 100,000 seabirds to date, with over 80 percent of rehabilitated penguins successfully released back into the wild.

Rescue and rehabilitation are only part of the story. Education plays a crucial role in long-term conservation. At the Cape Recife facility, visitors can experience the work firsthand and learn about the challenges facing seabirds. Conservation is not just about saving animals. It is about changing human behaviour.

As World Penguin Day reminds us, the story of the African penguin is still being written. The challenges are significant, but so is the dedication of those working to protect them. From the islands of Algoa Bay to the rehabilitation centre in Gqeberha, every egg rescued, every chick raised, and every bird released is a step toward recovery. And sometimes, the road to conservation is exactly that. A road we are proud to travel together.

 

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