Left: This female Antarctic fur seal and pup are part of a population only now recovering from the near extermination of early 19th Century sealing. Photo: Alan Hemmings. Opposite top: Courting snow Petrels: the most southerly, and exquisite, of ids. Photo: Alan Hemmings. Opposite middle: Penguins, such as these Chinstrap penguins from the Antarctic Peninsula, may lose their coastal breeding grounds to mining settlements if exploitation is allowed. In places they may already be competing with fishing vessels for their staple food — krill. Photo: Alan Hemmings. Opposite bottom: The most southerly breeding grounds of the elephant seal are at Anvers Island, scene of the recent Bahia Paraiso oil spill. Photo: Alan Hemmings
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/FORBI19890801.2.23.12
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Forest and Bird, Volume 20, Issue 3, 1 August 1989, Page 23
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112Left: This female Antarctic fur seal and pup are part of a population only now recovering from the near extermination of early 19th Century sealing. Photo: Alan Hemmings. Opposite top: Courting snow Petrels: the most southerly, and exquisite, of ids. Photo: Alan Hemmings. Opposite middle: Penguins, such as these Chinstrap penguins from the Antarctic Peninsula, may lose their coastal breeding grounds to mining settlements if exploitation is allowed. In places they may already be competing with fishing vessels for their staple food — krill. Photo: Alan Hemmings. Opposite bottom: The most southerly breeding grounds of the elephant seal are at Anvers Island, scene of the recent Bahia Paraiso oil spill. Photo: Alan Hemmings Forest and Bird, Volume 20, Issue 3, 1 August 1989, Page 23
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