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The great penguin rescue

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    For as long as I can remember,
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    I have felt a very deep connection
    to animals and to the ocean.
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    And at this age, my personal idol
    was Flipper the dolphin.
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    And when I first learned
    about endangered species,
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    I was truly distressed to know
    that every day,
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    animals were being wiped
    off the face of this Earth forever.
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    And I wanted to do something to help,
    but I always wondered:
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    What could one person possibly do
    to make a difference?
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    And it would be 30 years,
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    but I would eventually get
    the answer to that question.
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    When these heartbreaking
    images of oiled birds
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    finally began to emerge
    from the Gulf of Mexico last year
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    during the horrific BP oil spill,
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    a German biologist by the name
    of Silvia Gaus was quoted as saying,
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    "We should just euthanize all oiled birds,
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    because studies have shown
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    that fewer than one percent of them
    survive after being released."
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    And I could not disagree more.
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    In addition,
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    I believe that every oiled animal
    deserves a second chance at life.
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    And I want to tell you why
    I feel so strongly about this.
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    On June 23, 2000,
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    a ship named the Treasure sank
    off the coast of Cape Town, South Africa,
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    spilling 1,300 tons of fuel,
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    which polluted the habitats
    of nearly half the entire world population
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    of African penguins.
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    Now, the ship sank
    between Robben Island to the south,
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    and Dassen Island to the north --
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    two of the penguins' main
    breeding islands.
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    And exactly six years
    and three days earlier,
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    on June 20, 1994,
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    a ship named the Apollo Sea
    sank near Dassen Island,
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    oiling 10,000 penguins,
    half of which died.
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    Now when the Treasure sank in 2000,
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    it was the height
    of the best breeding season
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    scientists had ever recorded
    for the African penguin,
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    which at the time, was listed
    as a threatened species.
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    And soon, nearly 20,000 penguins
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    were covered with this toxic oil.
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    The local seabird rescue
    center, named SANCCOB,
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    immediately launched
    a massive rescue operation,
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    and this soon would become
    the largest animal rescue ever undertaken.
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    At the time, I was working
    down the street.
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    I was a penguin aquarist
    at the New England Aquarium.
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    And exactly 11 years ago yesterday,
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    the phone rang in the penguin office.
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    And with that call,
    my life would change forever.
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    It was Estelle van Der Merwe
    calling from SANCCOB,
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    saying, "Please come help.
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    We have thousands of oiled penguins
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    and thousands of willing
    but completely inexperienced volunteers.
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    And we need penguin experts
    to come train and supervise them."
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    So two days later,
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    I was on a plane headed for Cape Town
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    with a team of penguin specialists.
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    And the scene inside of this building
    was devastating and surreal.
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    In fact, many people
    compared it to a war zone.
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    Last week, a 10-year-old girl asked me:
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    "What did it feel like
    when you first walked into that building
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    and saw so many oiled penguins?"
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    And this is what happened.
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    I was instantly transported
    back to that moment in time.
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    Penguins are very vocal birds
    and really, really noisy,
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    so I expected to walk into this building
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    and be met with this cacophony
    of honking and braying and squawking.
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    But instead,
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    when we stepped through
    those doors and into the building,
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    it was eerily silent.
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    So it was very clear
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    these were stressed,
    sick, traumatized birds.
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    The other thing that was so striking
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    was the sheer number of volunteers.
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    Up to 1,000 people a day
    came to the rescue center.
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    Eventually, over the course
    of this rescue,
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    more than 12-and-a-half
    thousand volunteers
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    came from all over the world to Cape Town,
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    to help save these birds.
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    And the amazing thing
    was that not one of them had to be there.
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    Yet they were.
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    So for the few of us that were there
    in a professional capacity,
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    this extraordinary volunteer response
    to this animal crisis
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    was profoundly moving and awe-inspiring.
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    So the day after we arrived,
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    two of us from the aquarium
    were put in charge of room two.
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    Room two had more
    than 4,000 oiled penguins in it.
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    Now, mind you --
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    three days earlier,
    we had 60 penguins under our care,
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    so we were definitely overwhelmed
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    and just a bit terrified --
    at least I was.
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    Personally, I really didn't know
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    if I was capable of handling
    such a monstrous task.
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    And collectively,
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    we really didn't know
    if we could pull this off.
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    Because we all knew
    that just six years earlier,
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    half as many penguins
    had been oiled and rescued,
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    and only half of them had survived.
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    So would it be humanly possible
    to save this many oiled penguins?
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    We just did not know.
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    But what gave us hope
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    were these incredibly dedicated
    and brave volunteers,
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    three of whom here
    are force-feeding penguins.
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    You may notice they're wearing
    very thick gloves.
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    And what you should know
    about African penguins
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    is that they have razor-sharp beaks.
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    And before long,
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    our bodies were covered head to toe
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    with these nasty wounds
    inflicted by the terrified penguins.
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    Now the day after we arrived,
    a new crisis began to unfold.
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    The oil slick was now moving
    north towards Dassen Island,
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    and the rescuers despaired,
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    because they knew if the oil hit,
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    it would not be possible
    to rescue any more oiled birds.
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    And there really were no good solutions.
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    But then finally,
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    one of the researchers
    threw out this crazy idea.
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    He said, "OK, why don't we try
    and collect the birds
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    at the greatest risk of getting oiled" --
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    they collected 20,000 --
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    "and we'll ship them 500 miles
    up the coast to Port Elizabeth
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    in these open-air trucks,
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    and release them
    into the clean waters there
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    and let them swim back home?"
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    (Laughter)
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    So three of those penguins --
    Peter, Pamela and Percy --
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    wore satellite tags,
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    and the researchers crossed their fingers
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    and hoped that by the time
    they got back home,
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    the oil would be cleaned up
    from their islands.
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    And luckily, the day they arrived, it was.
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    So it had been a huge gamble,
    but it had paid off.
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    And so they know now
    that they can use this strategy
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    in future oil spills.
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    So in wildlife rescue as in life,
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    we learn from each previous experience,
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    and we learn from both
    our successes and our failures.
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    And the main thing learned
    during the Apollo Sea rescue in '94
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    was that most of those penguins
    had died due to the unwitting use
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    of poorly ventilated
    transport boxes and trucks,
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    because they just had not been prepared
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    to deal with so many
    oiled penguins at once.
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    So in these six years
    between these two oil spills,
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    they've built thousands
    of these well-ventilated boxes.
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    And as a result,
    during the Treasure rescue,
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    just 160 penguins died
    during the transport process,
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    as opposed to 5,000.
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    So this alone was a huge victory.
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    Something else learned
    during the Apollo rescue
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    was how to train the penguins
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    to take fish freely from their hands,
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    using these training boxes.
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    And we used this technique again
    during the Treasure rescue.
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    But an interesting thing was noted
    during the training process.
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    The first penguins to make
    that transition to free feeding
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    were the ones that had
    a metal band on their wing
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    from the Apollo Sea spill
    six years earlier.
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    So penguins learn
    from previous experience, too.
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    So all of those penguins had to have
    the oil meticulously cleaned
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    from their bodies.
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    It would take two people at least an hour
    just to clean one penguin.
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    When you clean a penguin,
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    you first have to spray it
    with a degreaser.
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    And this brings me to my favorite story
    from the Treasure rescue.
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    About a year prior to this oil spill,
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    a 17-year-old student
    had invented a degreaser.
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    And they'd been using it
    at SANCCOB with great success,
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    so they began using it
    during the Treasure rescue.
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    But partway through, they ran out.
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    So in a panic, Estelle
    from SANCCOB called the student
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    and said, "Please, you have to make more!"
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    So he raced to the lab
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    and made enough to clean
    the rest of the birds.
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    So I just think it is the coolest thing
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    that a teenager invented a product
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    that helped save the lives
    of thousands of animals.
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    So what happened
    to those 20,000 oiled penguins?
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    And was Silvia Gaus right?
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    Should we routinely euthanize
    all oiled birds
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    because most of them
    are going to die anyway?
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    Well, she could not be more wrong.
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    After half a million hours
    of grueling volunteer labor,
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    more than 90 percent
    of those oiled penguins
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    were successfully returned to the wild.
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    And we know from follow-up studies
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    that they have lived just as long
    as never-oiled penguins,
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    and bred nearly as successfully.
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    And in addition,
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    about 3,000 penguin chicks
    were rescued and hand raised.
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    And again, we know
    from long-term monitoring
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    that more of these hand-raised chicks
    survive to adulthood and breeding age
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    than do parent-raised chicks.
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    Armed with this knowledge,
    SANCCOB has a chick-bolstering project,
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    and every year, they rescue
    and raise abandoned chicks,
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    and they have a very impressive,
    80 percent success rate.
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    This is critically important,
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    because one year ago,
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    the African penguin
    was declared endangered.
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    And they could be extinct
    in less than 10 years
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    if we don't do something
    now to protect them.
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    So what did I learn
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    from this intense
    and unforgettable experience?
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    Personally, I learned that I am capable
    of handling so much more
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    than I ever dreamed possible.
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    And I learned that one person
    can make a huge difference.
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    Just look at that 17-year-old.
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    And when we come together and work as one,
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    we can achieve extraordinary things.
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    And truly, to be a part of something
    so much larger than yourself
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    is the most rewarding experience
    you can possibly have.
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    So I'd like to leave you
    with one final thought
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    and a challenge, if you will.
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    My mission as The Penguin Lady
    is to raise awareness and funding
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    to protect penguins.
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    But why should any of you
    care about penguins?
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    Well, you should care
    because they're an indicator species.
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    And simply put: if penguins are dying,
    it means our oceans are dying.
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    And we ultimately will be affected,
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    because, as Sylvia Earle says,
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    "The oceans are our life-support system."
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    And the two main threats to penguins today
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    are overfishing and global warming.
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    And these are two things
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    that each one of us actually has
    the power to do something about.
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    So if we each do our part, together,
    we can make a difference,
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    and we can help keep
    penguins from going extinct.
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    Humans have always been the greatest
    threat to penguins,
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    but we are now their only hope.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The great penguin rescue
Speaker:
Dyan deNapoli
Description:

A personal story, a collective triumph: Dyan deNapoli tells the story of the world's largest volunteer animal rescue, which saved more than 40,000 penguins after an oil spill off the coast of South Africa. How does a job this big get done? Penguin by penguin by penguin ...

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
11:23
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