CAPE TOWN — Hundreds of African penguins bask in the sun and frolic in the waves at Boulders Beach in Cape Town as tourists snap pictures from the boardwalk that traverses their breeding ground.
The flightless seabirds’ seemingly idyllic existence belies the fact that their species is under threat. Bird numbers at the main breeding colonies on South Africa’s west coast have plunged 90 percent since 2004, mainly because of a shortage of fish.
“Food is the problem,” University of Exeter researcher Richard Sherley, who published a study on the penguins this month, said by phone. “The outlook on the west coast is quite gloomy.”
The African penguin breeds only on 25 islands and at four mainland sites in South Africa and Namibia, and government data shows the number of breeding pairs has plummeted to less than 25,000, from about 1 million in the 1920s. The birds are a tourist draw — the Boulders reserve attracted 691,171 visitors last year, while 359,149 people went to Robben Island off Cape Town’s shore, where about 2,000 pairs nest and Nelson Mandela served time in a political prison.