yes if they mate in a rookeries
It is rookerie, looked back into my book ;)
Penguins live in groups called Rookeries.
Penguin?
Emperor penguins breed around Antarctica's beaches, where you can find their rookeries.
Macaroni penguins live in the Sub-Antarctic. They stay at sea half of the year. Then they come together in very big rookeries. There are millions of Macaroni penguins in just one rookery. There is much fighting in the crowded rookeries
Penguins nest in groups called rookeries. Some of these rookeries can have over a million birds! A group of penguins on land is called a waddle. A group of penguins in the water is called a raft. Sometimes the penguin chicks in a colony stay together in a large group called a creche.
Macaroni penguins live in the Sub-Antarctic. They stay at sea half of the year. Then they come together in very big rookeries. There are millions of Macaroni penguins in just one rookery. There is much fighting in the crowded rookeries
Adelie penguins lay eggs, like most birds. In the late spring, the Adelie penguin rookeries are full of hatched eggshells and chicks.
There is no official collective noun for a group of penguins. Some report that penguins nest in groups called rookeries. Others say a group of penguins on land is called a waddle, or that a group of penguins in the water is called a raft. Penguin chicks in a colony stay together in a large group called a creche.
Rookeries and Squawkeries - 1920 was released on: USA: 12 December 1920
Emperor penguins are sea birds and make their home at sea. However, they visit the Antarctic beaches to breed. Their rookeries are flat, mostly ice and rock rubble, and at the end of the breeding season are mostly intolerable for humans to visit -- because of the smell.