AP – The only emperor penguin known to have swum from Antarctica to Australia was released at sea 20 days after he waddled ashore on a popular tourist beach, officials said.
The adult male was found on November 1 on Ocean Beach sand dunes in the town of Denmark in temperate southwest Australia – about 3,500 kilometres north of the icy waters off the Antarctic coast, the Western Australia state government said.
He was released from a Parks and Wildlife Service boat last week.
The boat travelled for several hours from the state’s most southerly city of Albany before the penguin was released into the Southern Ocean, but the government didn’t give the distance in its statement.
He had been cared for by registered wildlife caregiver Carol Biddulph, who named him Gus after the first Roman emperor Augustus. “I really didn’t know whether he was going to make it to begin with because he was so undernourished,” Biddulph said in video before the bird’s release but released by the government. “I’ll miss Gus. It’s been an incredible few weeks, something I wouldn’t have missed,” she added.
Biddulph said she had found from caring for other species of lone penguins that mirrors were an important part of their rehabilitation by providing a comforting sense of company.