they have layers of black and white feathers to keep them warm
All 17 species of penguins live in the southern hemisphere. Usually found near water where they survive best and in secluded areas where there are few predators to take advantage of their flightless wings. Penguins can live in any climate from tropical to the freezing waters of Antarctica.
No Penguins only live in the Southern Hemisphere. In Alaska they would not survive, the climate that they require simply dosent suit for a Penguin in Alaska.
All penguins are cold-climate. Some can adapt better than others, and some will be able to move further inland. The ones that need sea ice to survive are the ones that are in the most trouble because moving inland (to colder areas) is not an option.
They are birds. If the female penguin does not return from the sea, the male will ditch the chicks & eggs to go look for her. Penguins can survive in temperatures well below freezing.
Penguins huddle in packs to keep warm. The males have to do that when they are protecting themsleves and their eggs.
Chlamydia trachomatis will not survive freezing.
There are no penguins in the Arctic.
no,a cactus can't survive in northpole because it will become frozen and it would die. Cactus can almostly survive in any climate. In northpole it is very cold and the cactus is not adapted to low temperatures. Cactus need warmth and in northpole there is freezing weather and freezing water, cactus can't survive in northpole.
There are no penguins in the Arctic only the Antarctic!
Because they have to survive freezing temperatures! so they need a thick coat and lots of fat to live. Penguins also huddle close together to get warmth and shield each other from the wind. They take turns being on the outside in the cold!
its fur
they do not