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 TITLE: Little Penguin
 AUTHORS: Colin Stahel + Rosemary Gales
 ILLUSTRATOR: Jane Burrell
 PUBLISHER: New South Wales University Press 1987
 OTHER: 117 pages

The animal that bit Linus Torvalds when he visited Canberra zoo, resulting
in Tux being chosen as the Linux mascot, was almost certainly a little or
fairy penguin, species _Eudyptula minor_.  As a study of that species,
one would expect _Little Penguin_ to be rather specialised, but in fact
it effectively teaches quite a bit of general biology, setting the
fairy penguin in the context of broader ornithology, marine biology,
ecology, and functional anatomy.  I'm a firm believer in this approach
-- detailed case studies in broader context -- as a tool for learning,
and _Little Penguin_ is an accessible example, with lively prose backed
up by informative halftones and diagrams.

Chapter one is a brief account of fairy penguin taxonomy and distribution.
        
        "Penguins are widely distributed in the southern hemisphere,
        but all species are not, as is widely thought, confined to
        the antarctic.  Those readers who, up to the present, have
        considered that the fairy penguin must be an antarctic resident
        are encouraged to read this book closely!  Only two species are
        solely antarctic residents: the emperor penguin and the Adelie
        penguin.  There is a much larger group of penguins that are found
        in the region known as the subantarctic, and further north there
        are a number of temperate zone penguins.  Just to shatter any
        preconceptions, there is even a species of penguin that lives
        under the shadow of the equator: the Galapagos penguin."
        
There are six subspecies of little penguin, five found in New Zealand
and one in Australia.

Chapter two surveys penguin functional anatomy, and in particular their
adaptations for life in the sea.  These include denser feathers for
waterproofing, skeletal modifications for swimming, eyes modified to
cope with refractive index changes between water and air, and glands for
disposal of excess salt.  
        
        "Oxygen extractive efficiency gives the percentage of inspired
        oxygen in air that is extracted from each breath.  In resting
        fairy penguins this value averages 50 percent.  By comparison,
        mammals have an oxygen extraction efficiency of approximately
        15 percent, and other birds ... approach 30 percent."
        
Thermoregulation is a particular problem for little penguins: on the
one hand they must maintain a body temperature of around 38.5 celsius
in cold water; on the other they can't cope with air temperatures above
35 celsius, which can create problems when nesting.  These constraints
probably set the limits of their range.

Chapter three describes the fairy penguin life-cycle and lifestyle.  Fairy
penguin pairs typically build nests around the end of September (they
nest in burrows, aggregated in colonies), incubate their eggs in October,
and raise nestlings through November and December.  Females almost always
lay two eggs, but often only one nestling will be fed (brood reduction).
In January fairy penguins build up their body weight as preparation for
moulting in February -- not only is growing new feathers physiologically
demanding, but moulting penguins lack waterproof feathers and can not
survive at sea, so they effectively starve and can lose half their
body weight.  Tracking penguins at sea is difficult, but studies reveal
that fairy penguins usually feed within 10 kilometres of the shore, that
their maximum dive depths are around 10 to 30 metres (though some go
down to 60 metres), and that their diet is predominantly fish and squid.

Chapter four is a very brief look at "the penguin problem".
        
        "The fairy penguin is not immediately endangered or directly
        exploited, but there are a number of areas where the fairy penguin
        is potentially vulnerable and locally diminished as the result
        of man."
        
Threats to fairy penguins include pollution (especially oil spills),
accidental netting and overfishing, introduced predators, habitat
destruction, and some direct attacks.

--

%T      Little Penguin
%S      Fairy Penguins in Australia
%A      Stahel, Colin
%A      Gales, Rosemary
%Q      Burrell, Jane
%I      New South Wales University Press
%C      Sydney
%D      1987
%O      paperback, b&w halftones, references, index
%G      ISBN 0-86840-290-7
%P      117pp
%U      
http://spook.netaus.net.au/unswp/unswpcgi.exe/unswp/unswp.qry?function=detail&books_uid1=Little%20Penguin%20ANHS
%K      zoology

4 December 2000

        ------------------------------------------------------
        Copyright (c) 2000 Danny Yee       http://danny.oz.au/
        Danny Yee's Book Reviews      http://dannyreviews.com/
        ------------------------------------------------------



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