Fishin' for Facts: Penguins

There are seventeen species of penguins, so the sizes the reach depends. Penguins range in size from the fairy penguin which only gets about 9 inches tall to the emperor penguin which can reach lengths up to 3-4 feet tall. Here are fourteen species, can you name the missing ones?

    emperor
    Magellenic
    Humboldt
    black-footed
    chinstrap
    gentoo
    Fiordland crested
    yellow-eyed
    fairy
    rockhopper
    erect-crested
    Snares Island
    Galapagos
    royal

All penguins are found below the equator. The Galapagos penguin lives - guess where? You're right, the Galapagos Islands near the equator.

Penguins eat squid, octopus, fish and krill.

Adult penguins are black and white, some have yellow head feathers. The blue/fairy penguin has a blue tint to its feathers. Penguins are hatched from eggs. Depending upon the species, penguins lay one to two eggs at a time. Often only one chick survives.

Penguin chicks may be light to dark gray depending upon the species. When hatched they have very soft downy feathers. They keep the penguin chick warm, but are not waterproof, so the chick cannot go in to the water.

Since penguins are found in different habitats, predators vary. However, predators include sharks, killer whales, sea lions, and leopard seals.

Can penguins fly? No, none of them can fly -- through the air. They can, however, fly through the water. They swim by moving their flippers (wings) like other birds use their wings to fly. Some penguins can swim as fast as 8 mph. Scientists believe that the penguin (or its prehistoric relatives) never could fly, it has always been adapted as a ground bird.

On average penguins can live 15 to 20 years. Of course, not all live that long. In fact, many chicks do not survive their first year.


Here are a few books you might want to read:

"Penguins" by John Sparks and Tony Soper, Facts on File, 1987

"Penguins" by Roger Tory Peterson, Houghton Mifflin, 1979

"The Penguins" Oxford University Press, 1995


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