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Rockhopper penguin keeping - the rocky road to success This short book provides all penguin-lovers with deep insights into the experience we gained in Rockhopper penguin keeping at Schönbrunn Zoo. Captive breeding is no easy task when dealing with these birds. This report presents the advances we have made over the past 35 years and highlights the needs of our penguins, natural breeding and brooding, as well as hand-raising. It will no doubt be helpful for all zoologists, animal keepers and zoo staff members in developing their own recipe for success.
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Seitenzahl: 40
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2017
Experience is not what happens to you;
it’s what you do with what happens to you.
Aldous Huxley
Foreword
Retrospective – the rocky road to success
Rockhopper penguins – general information
Description
Species
Distribution range and population
Habitat
Diet
Brooding
Keeping at Schönbrunn Zoo
Historically
Today
Diet
Lighting
Annual cycle
Tagging
Keeping with other penguins
Foot problems (pododermatitis)
Terrain structure, Nests
Nesting material
Brooding
Pair formation
Disturbance factors
Hand-raising
Incubator
Why hand-raising
Temperature and conditions
Feeding
Weight development in hand-raised chicks
Captive breeding successes and outlook
References
Further reading
List of figures
Acknowledgements
Keeping penguins has a very long tradition at Schönbrunn Zoo. After WWII, the efforts initially concentrated on Humboldt and Jackass penguins. It wasn’t until 1975, upon completion of the Seal House with its integrated facility for penguins, that more demanding species such as King and Rockhopper penguins could be held.
My career as an animal keeper began in October 1977. My first contact with penguins took place in my second year of training. Towards the end of my training period I was already spending most of my time in the Seal House and therefore assigned to the Rockhopper penguins as well. Upon completing my apprenticeship exams I worked in various enclosures, but my true passion always remained the Seal House. My interest in these comical, upright-walking birds continued to grow during this period. In spring 1982 I was permanently assigned to the seal and penguin facility. At this time, none of the three penguin species had ever produced offspring. I enthusiastically accepted this challenge. The time of experiments and setbacks began. At that time, information on penguin keeping was generally very incomplete – only minimal documentation was available from other zoos as well. Even the scientific literature offered little useful material. In the first 15 years I undertook one or two tours to the various zoos almost every year. Initially, I mainly visited German zoos in order to gain information about the animals under my care. Around 1990, these trips also took me to Berlin, where my colleague and newly won friend Dieter Petersen had collected the first useful and more detailed tips about hand-raising Rockhopper penguins. For the first time, I got my hands on a recipe for a rearing mash, which I took home with me.
After gaining a wealth of personal experience, especially together with my colleague Christian Windisch, I decided to publish this information in the hope that it will prove useful support and encouragement to other animal keepers and zoo staff members elsewhere.
Ludwig Feßl
Head facility manager for seals, penguins and bears
Animal keeper at Schönbrunn Zoo
Figure 1. Christian Windisch, Stefanie Stenitzer, Ludwig Feßl (2009)
Around 1980 we kept 4 Rockhopper penguins and 8 King penguins in a ca. 60 m2, climatized indoor facility with a cooled 30 m2