Wildlife Hospital staff, rangers and volunteers have been working around the clock to take care of 100 yellow-eyed penguin chicks since the beginning of this month.
Hoiho chicks began to hatch across Otago and Southland in late October, and the hospital had received patients with diphtheria stomatitis (an infection that can cause respiratory problems) in waves ever since.
Hospital manager Jordana Whyte said the hoiho chicks weighed just 120g to 150g.
"These little birds are so tiny — just a handful — so mostly they eat, poop and sleep, just like most babies."
They were brought in by field teams from the Department of Conservation, the Yellow-eyed Penguin Trust, Penguin Place, Penguin Rescue, and University of Otago researchers and volunteers who had been out in "every weather".