Colorado State Veterinarians Perform Radiation Treatment on 40-Year-Old African Penguin

Movies like "Happy Feet" and "March of the Penguins" often remind us of how cute penguins are in the cold, Antarctic conditions where they live. These movies, however, fail to mention another species of penguin that reside in warmer climates and is slowly dying out: African penguins. Although they are on track to be extinct within the next 20 years, the Pueblo Zoo in Colorado and Colorado State University, Fort Collins recently performed cancer treatments on the oldest living African penguin in the world, ensuring that the penguin will be healthy enough to live a longer life.

Written byLaura Braden
| 2 min read
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Tess, a 40-year-old African penguin residing at the Pueblo Zoo in Pueblo, Colorado recently underwent treatment at Colorado State University, Fort Collins to fight skin cancer

A team of veterinarians, interns, residents, staff and students in Fort Collins from a variety of different departments, including oncology, radiology, exotics, and anesthesiology came together to help remove the sarcoma from between Tess's beak and right eye. The team used state-of-the-art technology to perform radiation treatment on this special patient to localize the radiation to one spot without harming any other tissue or organs near the sarcoma. 

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