Penguin | The penguin is found pretty much only in the Southern Hemisphere, only a handful of penguins though are in the far south. The emperor penguin
inhabits the icy lands of Antarctica. Despite what many think, the
penguin is not only found in arctics, one species of penguin lives as
far north as the Galapagos Islands.
Generally the penguin is around 1m tall, but one species, known as the fairy penguin, that only 40m high! The penguins stay together in large colonies
with anywhere up to 50,000 penguins in the group. The penguin spends
75% of its time in the water hunting for food. It is thought that the Antarctic penguins eat krill and squid where the penguins in warmer climates tend to eat fish.
The penguin is one of the few species of bird, that despite having wings, is unable to fly.
To make up for this though, penguins have perfected their jumping
technique with some penguins being able to jump a couple of meters! Penguins seem
to have no special fear of humans and penguins have often approached
groups of explorers without hesitation. This is probably because there
are no land predators in Antarctica or the nearby offshore islands that prey on or attack penguins. Instead, penguins are at risk at sea from predators such as the seal and sharks.
Typically, penguins do
not approach humans closer than about 3 meters (10 ft) at which point
the penguins tend to become nervous and retreat. This is also the
distance that Antarctic tourists are told to keep from penguins
(tourists are not supposed to approach closer than 3 meters, but are not
expected to withdraw if the penguins come closer). It is the penguins
home after all.
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