A small robot that looks and acts like a baby penguin is helping researchers study penguins in a more natural way.
When scientists study any animals in the wild, it usually means a human has to get close to them to gather information. But people make animals nervous, so when human researchers are around, the animals don’t act the way they normally would.
A team of scientists led by Yvon Le Maho, from the University of Strasbourg in France, wanted to find a way to study penguins in Antarctica without disturbing them or changing their natural behaviour.
In the first part of their experiment, they attached tiny heart-rate monitors to a group of king penguins so they could measure how fast their hearts were beating. When a penguin is experiencing stress, its heart beats faster.
When humans approached the penguins, the penguins moved away from them and moved into other penguins’ territories. That caused fighting and disorganization that affected the whole penguin colony.
Then the researchers sent a small, remote-controlled robot, or rover, in amongst the penguins. The rover was designed to read information from the monitors and send it back to the researchers.
Some of the penguins tried to attack the four-wheeled rover. Generally, however, the researchers found that the penguins’ heart rates increased less around the rover than they did when a human approached them. The signs of stress also went away more quickly.
Next, the researchers used the rover to study emperor penguins, which are extremely shy around humans.
They decided to disguise the rover to make it less noticeable. They tried five disguises and decided the penguins were the most relaxed when it looked like an emperor penguin chick.
The researchers covered the rover in soft grey fur and gave it black arms, a black and white face, and a black beak. When they sent it into the colony, the penguins did not run away from it or attack it. They allowed it to huddle with the other baby penguins, and some of the adults even called out to it the way they would to a real chick.
The rover made it possible for the scientists to gather information about the penguins without upsetting them or changing the way they behaved.
The researchers spent a year in Antarctica, working with a group of filmmakers who were making a documentary on penguins for British television.
The filmmakers helped design the penguin-chick rover. They also placed 50 “spy” cameras around the colony to film the birds with no humans around.
Ten of the cameras were hidden in “animatronic” robots (robots designed to look and act like penguins). Others were hidden in fake eggs that looked so realistic some adult penguins tried to hatch them and predators tried to steal them away.
Using the robots and spy cameras, the scientists were able to gather five times more information than they could have gathered on their own. They published the results of their experiment in a journal called Nature Methods.