Article 75M52 How a kindergarten teacher became the accidental guardian of 200 king penguins

How a kindergarten teacher became the accidental guardian of 200 king penguins

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Douwe den Held Photographs by Anastasia Austin
from on (#75M52)

When the birds started nesting on her land at Useless Bay, Chile, Cecilia Duran Gafo decided she would protect them from people and predators

Five pairs of rubbery feet carry velvet-sheathed black-and-white bodies towards the rope line separating the king penguins from the dozen or so visitors, who look on in awe. As these emissaries shuffle over, a hundred of their cohorts parade on a nearby bank, splashing around in the water and regurgitating food into their chicks' open beaks.

The king penguin (Aptenodytes patagonicus) makes its home almost exclusively on islands in the Southern Ocean. But it has been coming to this wind-battered bay in southern Chile's Tierra del Fuego region for hundreds of years, probably because its shallow shores offer protection from marine predators and humans.

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