"This is a really unusual penguin. It is the first time we have ever seen a mature penguin that has come in from the wild and simply refuses to swim," centre director Richard Benton said. Morgan also has a unique habit of flipping his water bowl upside down and standing on it, Benton said. Penguin keeper Mallorie Hackett said Morgan was "full of character" and was "definitely a ladies man". In 25 days' time he will be introduced to the centre's main penguin encounter, where Hackett hopes he will befriend Parnia, a single female white-flippered penguin. White-flippered penguins are one of the smallest and most endangered penguins in the world.

They are endemic to Canterbury, breeding only on Banks Peninsula and Motonau Island. AFP reports: The tiny bird was found starving and malnourished at a penguin colony on the property of conservationist Shirleen Helps, where the population has fallen dramatically this year as changing weather patterns have reduced fish stocks. "This year's been a terrible year, we've had big starvation issues at sea," said Helps. "A lot of chicks have starved to death before we could actually help them, then the adults started getting into trouble and started ending up too skinny to get the through the moult and this one was one of those ... we've probably lost 80-90 per cent of the chicks this year." New Zealand's Department of Conservation (DOC) says the culprit is La Nina, a weather pattern characterised by unusually cool ocean temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific.

UN scientists have linked La Nina to recent episodes of extreme weather around the globe, including flooding in Australia and drought in East Africa and the western seaboard of South America. DOC says it has also had an impact on New Zealand's penguins, predicting thousands of birds could die this year as the most severe La Nina in 25 years reduces the schools of baitfish upon which they depend. "Calm seas stop the mixing of water columns making it harder for seabirds to find food," DOC vet Kate Mcinnes said. "Any seabird that relies on fish will struggle." Autopsies completed this month on the bodies of 18 penguins found washed up on New Zealand shores found none had food in their stomachs and they died from starvation and exposure. The refuge where Morgan found a home cares for 24 penguins that have been injured and would have no chance of surviving in the wild.

"Most of them have broken or paralysed flippers, some have eating disabilities so I have to assist them, others have broken beaks," Hackett said. Inhabitants include Elvis, who is blind and locates his food by following the rustle of the fish bucket on his enclosure's gravel, and Bagpipes, a one-legged penguin who sports a modified neoprene beer cooler to keep his stump dry. Helps, who runs eco-tours at the colony on her property, said the refuge provided an important service by housing injured birds. "The best option is to release them into the wild in good condition," she said. "[But] it's always good to know one's in good care. It's hard releasing them into the sea when you don't think they've got much chance." stuff.co.nz, The Press, AFP

