Endangered penguins killed by swarm of bees in South Africa
The postmortems revealed that all 63 penguins had died of multiple bee stings.
A swarm of bees has killed 63 endangered African penguins on a beach outside Cape Town, the Southern African Foundation for the Conservation of Coastal Birds said.
"After tests, we found bee stings around the penguins' eyes," said the foundation's David Roberts, a clinical veterinarian.
"This is a very rare occurence. We do not expect it to happen often, its a fluke.
"There were also dead bees on the scene," he told AFP by telephone.
The protected birds, found on Friday, were from a colony at Simonstown, a small town near Cape Town.
The area is a national park and the Cape honey bees are part of the ecosystem.
"The penguins... must not die just like that as they are already in danger of extinction. They are a protected species," said Roberts.
With humans in lockdown, penguins are roaming free in the quiet streets of South Africa.
— farhadudin mahar (@FarhadudinMahar) April 21, 2020
Video courtesy: The Southern African Foundation for the Conservation of Coastal Birds (SANCCOB) on Twitter. pic.twitter.com/wKfrzSvCoy
Samples sent for testing
The South African National Parks said the birds were taken to the foundation for post-mortems and samples sent for disease and toxicology testing.
"There were no external physical injuries found on any of the birds," a parks statement said.
The post-mortems showed all the penguins had multiple bee stings.
African penguins, which inhabit the coast and islands of southern Africa, are on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's red list, meaning they face a high risk of extinction.