Bird of the Year: Vote for me, the Adélie

BOTY real photo poster
2 September 2024

Antarctica New Zealand is campaigning for the Adélie penguin to be the next New Te Manu Rongonui o te Tau – Bird of the Year 2024.

More than a third of the global Adélie penguin population lives in Aotearoa's home in Antarctica, the Ross Sea region, and New Zealand plays an important role in protecting them. Vote here!

Going for glory.



NZ’s bird from our home in Antarctica

The little black-and-white penguins thrive in New Zealand’s home in Antarctica, the Ross Sea region, where about a third of the global Adélie population live. The curious birds sometimes visit Scott Base and a few have even made the 4000km swim across the Southern Ocean to New Zealand.

Adelie March
Photo: Anthony Powell/Antarctica New Zealand


Annual penguin census

New Zealand plays a crucial role in protecting these penguins. Antarctica New Zealand and Manaaki Whenua have conducted an annual Adélie penguin census in the Ross Sea region since the early 1980s, making it one of the longest-running biological time series in Antarctica. This invaluable data helps us understand and protect Adélie penguin populations.

Census photographs are processed in New Zealand using specialized semi-automated software, which facilitates the counting of nesting Adélie penguins.


Antarctic ocean ecosystems

Often considered the world’s feistiest penguin, Adélies are a vital indicator of ecosystem health, like the proverbial canary in a coal mine. Fluctuations in their population can signal shifts in prey abundance or other factors impacting marine ecosystems. Their survival is under threat from the ever-changing climate, with their life spans intricately intertwined with sea ice —which hit a record low last year.

Photo: Lana Young/Antarctic Science Platform


- Go here to vote

- See all the beautiful birds at Bird of the Year ‹ Forest & Bird

- Voting to begin in Bird of the Year competition | RNZ