Made with Love

“Gay penguins to be separated’’ LOL

To separate the two penguins is asinine. Let them just be happy for chrissakes. I REALLY hope they are invited to the Pride parade next year.
 
Great, I guess we will have to make sure Ford doesn't try to barbecue them if he were to show up next year.
 
"...Since African penguins are endangered......" maybe the reason that they are is because they are all FAGS.
Separate them.
 
If I remember right they will put them back together after they mate with the females.......
They are forcing them to have sex with females

Wonder what the music they are going to play Cher...Bee Gees.......:lol:
I wonder if they showed some porn movies also to help them...
 
peace said:
I concur....our society remains homophobic....so sad.

The funniest part of this is most homophobic men are the first to put on lesbian porn, and don't consider it 'gay'. Just another double standard.
 
TORONTO - Toronto Zoo African penguins Pedro and Buddy — the same-sex love birds who made international headlines after they were separated to mate — have so far laid an egg when it comes to making babies.

Gay penguins, and other animals, can be found in captivity and in the wild.
But Pedro and Buddy are now part of Species Survival Plan launched in November.
Buddy was paired with a female and some mating activity has taken place.

Pedro was first introduced to a female penguin on Dec. 1 but no bonding has taken place.
“We have been pleased with the pair bonding and breeding activity of the program so far,” Tom Mason, the curator of birds and invertebrates at the zoo, said.
“African penguins are endangered and breeding programs such as the one currently in progress at the Toronto Zoo are integral to the survival of the species,” he said.
Each pair of birds is given a nest box lined with gravel and flexible tubing to create the nest.

Female African penguins can lay an egg anywhere from a few days to a month after she has ovulated.
“Given the amount of breeding activity we are optimistic that the program will yield positive results,” Mason said. “If all goes according to plan we could see new African penguin chicks at the Toronto Zoo as early as the end of January 2012.”

Most often, one egg is laid and both of the parents take turns incubating it. After birth, both care for the chick for up to six weeks.
At that point, zoo keepers care for the chicks.

Ninety-five per cent of the African penguin population in the wild has disappeared.
In 1910 there were an estimated 1.2 million African penguins and today there are only about 50,000 left.

 
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