New Zealand police have returned two blue penguins to their natural habitat after they refused to leave a sushi store in Wellington. The "waddling vagrants" had been removed once before.
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Two little blue penguins that broke into a sushi stall at the busiest railway station in Wellington, a seaside city on the southern tip of New Zealand's Northern Island, have been returned to their natural habitat.
Police said the "waddling vagrants" were lured with salmon away from the stall before being returned back to the water. The store's co-owner joked that he had no idea that his tasty raw fish had attracted the subaquatic community.
Authorities said they had returned a little blue penguin to the ocean on Sunday evening after it was found loitering in the city center.
On Monday morning, they received more calls and found two penguins nesting beneath the Sushi Bi store at Wellington Railway Station. Police captured and released them, but they were back under the stall again a few hours later.
Once they were moved back to the waterfront, wildlife officers sealed up the sushi stall's crevices to ensure the penguins wouldn't attempt to restore their nest.
Little blue penguins, also known as fairy penguins, are the smallest species of flightless sea birds with an average height of 25 centimeters (10 inches) and an average weight of about one kilogram (2.2 pounds).
They are native to New Zealand and relatively common in Wellington. They are listed as an at-risk species, with dogs considered their main threat.
Penguins - the coolest birds to ever wear a tux
Have you heard about northern Germany's gay penguins? How about Sir Nils Olav? No? Then it's about time! Penguin Awareness Day on January 20 is the perfect occasion to learn more about the waddling birds.
Image: picture alliance/dpa/I. Wagner
Penguin Awareness Day
January 20 is Penguin Awareness Day - which is not the same as World Penguin Day on April 25. Adelie penguins and all their relatives are so great that someone decided to give them not one but two annual holidays. So in honor of this special day, DW is raising awareness of the adorable, flightless birds.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/D. Lewins
Underwater torpedoes
They can't fly and they're not great at walking either. Despite their fancy tuxedoes, penguins often look slighty clutzy on land. That all changes as soon as they hit the seas. Their streamlined bodies allow them to shoot through water like a torpedo. Even the tallest and heaviest species, the emperor penguins, can swim as quickly as 2.7 (8.9 feet) meters per second.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/F. Rumpenhorst
Beach bums
It seems like an odd combination at first: sand, sun - and penguins? But the birds don't just live in Antarctica. These guys are African penguins. A whole colony of them can be found at Simon's Town in South Africa. Sunny Australia is home to the little penguins. The smallest penguin species grows to be only 30 centimeters (12 inches) tall. Emperor penguins get to be 1.3 meters (4.3 feet).
Image: Lars Bevanger
Sir Nils Olav
Here you see an honorary Colonel-in-Chief inspecting his troops. King penguin Brigadier Sir Nils Olav III. lives at Edinburgh Zoo in Scotland. He was knighted in 2008. In 1913, Norway presented the zoo with its first king penguin and in 1972, the King's Guard adopted one: Nils Olav I. He and his two successors at the Edinburgh Zoo have since risen through the ranks from mascot to Colonel-in-Chief.
Image: Getty Images/E. Jones
Knitting against the Black Tide
After oil spills penguins are often cleaned by volunteers. But the gentle hands can't scrub all the oil from the birds' sticky feathers. That's why they put little wool sweaters on the penguins so they don't swallow oil trying to clean their feathers themselves. The oil also destroys the birds' isolating fat layer and the sweaters protect them from the cold.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Philip Island Nature Parks/Hpicture-alliance/dpa/Philip Island Nature Parks/H
Hollywood stars
The cute birds are also successful movie stars. Movies like "The Penguins of Madagascar" and "Happy Feet" were successful animated flicks that featured penguins as protagonists. "March of the Penguins" was a documentary about emperor penguins and the struggles they go through for their chicks. It won the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature.
Image: picture-alliance/blickwinkel/R. Linke
Everything for the kids
The film shows emperor penguins during breeding season. The birds walk for weeks from the sea to their breeding spots in the middle of Antarctica's ice dessert. There the male keeps the egg on his feet. The female goes back to sea to eat. The males huddle together to keep warm in the freezing winds. When the chick hatches after 60 days of growing, the father has lost one third of his body weight.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Gay penguin love
The Bremerhaven Zoo in northern Germany wanted to breed the endangered Humboldt penguins in captivity. But because it's hard to determine the birds' gender, no one at the zoo realized for a long time that most of the animals they had were males. The penguins didn't mind and formed "gay" couples. In the absence of egg-laying females, the homosexual couples tried to hatch stones.