Galapagos Penguin
| Galapagos Penguin Conservation status: Endangered | ||||||||||||||
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| Spheniscus mendiculus Sundevall, 1871 |
The Galapagos Penguin (Spheniscus mendiculus) is a penguin endemic to the Galapagos Islands. It is the only penguin to live on the equator. Its nearest relatives are the African Penguin, the Magellanic Penguin and the Humboldt Penguin.
Galapagos Penguins grow to 53 cm tall. They have a black head with a white border running from behind the eye, around the black ear-coverts and chin, to join on the throat. They have blackish-grey upperparts and whitish underparts, with two black bands across the breast, the lower band extending down the flanks to the thigh. Juveniles differ in having a wholly dark head, greyer on side and chin, and no breast-band.
The species is endangered, with an estimated population size of 600 pairs only. The population underwent an alarming decline of 65% since the mid-1990s which makes it the rarest penguin species (a status which is often falsely attributed to the Yellow-eyed penguin). In recent decades this species has been influenced by the effects of the El Niño Southern Oscillation on the availability of shoaling fish but anthropogenic factors (e.g. oil pollution, fishing bycatch and competition) also add to the ongoing demise of this species.
External link
- Galapagos penguins from the International Penguin Conservation Web Site
- Galapagos penguins pictures
- Galapagos Gallery and penguins pictures
Categories: Endangered species | Penguins