Hi all, happy New Year and thanks for your patience in waiting for me to post again - because PENGUINS!
Yes, it's that time of our stay on Marion Island when we field researchers get the chance to follow up on the penguin hatchlings. On this last trek out, my job was to focus on the Macaroni and Rockhopper penguins.
Some penguin background to keep you in penguin suspense
You can probably guess that the Rockhopper got its name from its dance moves on the rocks.
This link is pretty helpful.
Now for the bird pics
Rockhopper penguins
These are Rockhopper penguins which are incubating at the moment. They're the ones that bounce around on the rocks, just like their name says.


Macaroni penguins
The Macaroni penguins at a place called the Amphitheatre here on the island where there are thousands of breeding Macaroni penguins. The eggs have started hatching now, a really exciting time for us researchers.




Brown Skua
This is a Brown Skua with its young chick, about 1 week old.

Grey-headed Albatross
Here's an incubating Grey-headed albatross. Their eggs have also started to hatch.

Sooty Albatross
Here are the Sooty albatrosses, which have small chicks now.

Antarctic Tern
This small grey bird with red beak and feet is an antarctic tern. They've started breeding recently on the island. Exciting!

Now for some Seal
Fur seals
The fur seals also started their breeding season. The young ones are being born now.


Isn't life hard? ;-)
Elephant seals
These are molting elephant seals.

Me and my penguin peeps
And these pics are of me working counting the Macaroni and Rockhopper penguins around the island. Just call me Rockhopper!



Conservation note
On a serious note, the work we're doing with the penguins is important. Because of commercial overfishing and a number of other factors, some estimates put the decline of the Rockhopper population at more than thirty percent over the last thirty years of the last century. We're still trying to figure out the numbers in the 21st century and the work of our team contributes significantly to that all important data.
The work of this team on Marion Island is coming to an end. Pretty soon we'll be back in South Africa and back to "regular life". But the conservation lessons I've learned here will stick with me for a lifetime.
Team South Africa banner designed by @bearonePhoto credits: Paige Potter and Thando Cebekhulu