they will have to make themselves very safe by that i mean seals cant eat them they shouldn't run out of food they should not get hurt and all the stuff we do to not get hurt oh and use there beaks
no
Mammals are warm blooded, bear live young, nurse their young, and have hair (of some sort ) at least at some time in their lives. Penguins are animals, BUT not mammals. They are birds, although they swim rather than fly. Birds have feathers (although the penguins' are furry-like in feel) and lay eggs. Like mammals, birds have a backbone and are warm-blooded. Some mammals do lay eggs, like the Platypus, or the spiny echidna. But most bear live young.
yes the gullibius penguin live on Madagascar
No, parrots seem the most intelligent than any other birds because they learn quicker than other birds,that's why parrots are the only birds that really know how to talk and they learn to repeat people so they learn more and have a great memory of what people say. Penguins are probably the second most intelligent birds.
Yes, far longer. The chicken would die within two or three days; the emperor penguin has adapted to extreme low temperatures.
Yes as birds with hollow bones cannot fly for longer whereas penguins do not have hollow bones and are able to swim in rough tides for ages. Also non-hollow bones are stronger and tougher than hollow bones.
Penguins are cooler than monkeys because they live in the Antarctic while the monkey is from the rain forest
because deers live in the forest and penguins dont?
The most obvious difference is flight. Penguins can't fly and puffins can. Puffins have longer feathers and don't live in the cold places that most penguins do. Most penguins are larger than puffins. Puffins have short, stubby, colorful, conical bills while penguins have longer, pointier bills. Puffins have pointy feathers behind their eyes and penguins don't. Try to look up images of penguins and puffins and compare the difference.
Fairy penguins are little penguins that live on the southern coasts of Australia, Africa and America. They also live in New Zealand and Antarctica. They live in places slightly warmer than usual.
well i heard that for budgies the can live longer in the wild because theres a bigger variety of fresh foods. not sure if it is the same with other birds though. it also depends if an animal kills them:(
Strictly speaking, the king penguin does not live on the Antarctic continent, but rather on the sub-Antarctic islands. It is unknown how many birds there are in a single king penguin colony on these islands. However, according to the Antarctica Connection website, there are approximately 2 million breeding pairs of king penguins living in the sub-Antarctic region.