Shocking! Bees kill rare South African penguins in a freak accident

By Lokmat English Desk | Published: September 22, 2021 06:04 PM2021-09-22T18:04:34+5:302021-09-22T18:04:34+5:30

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Dozens of rare penguins have been killed by a swarm of bees in South Africa, in what conservation experts have described as a freak accident.

More than 60 African penguins were found dead on Boulders Beach near Cape Town, many with bee stings around their eyes, an occurrence researchers said was unprecedented.

The Southern African Foundation for the Conservation of Coastal Birds said in a statement that it suspects a bees' nest was disturbed in the area.

While penguins have been stung by bees before, the foundation said it had not seen an incident on this scale.

Katta Ludynia, research manager at the foundation, said her team initially thought a predator was behind the deaths.

Later, postmortems revealed neither a predator nor disease were to blame, but instead found bee stings in the birds' eyes.

The foundation's rangers at the penguin colony at Boulders Beach will now monitor nests closely to see if the birds had eggs or chicks.

If so, they will intervene to rescue them for hand-rearing, the foundation said.

"The African penguin population is rapidly declining, and it is very sad to see the deaths of so many healthy, most likely breeding adults," Dr. David Roberts, the foundation's clinical veterinarian, said.

"This unusual event is part of what can happen in a normal balanced ecosystem and if the penguins were not in such trouble already, it wouldn't be such a tragedy."There are 10,300 breeding pairs of African penguins left in South Africa and the foundation says some 40,000 breeding pairs have been lost in the last 20 years.