Penguins have feathers, wings and a beak. Penguins lay eggs and feed their babies.
they share birds have wings andpenguins have wings
Marsupials are mammals, so share all features with other mammals. As well, they are vertebrates, so share the characteristic of having a backbone with birds, fish, reptiles and amphibians. Like birds and reptiles, mammals breathe via lungs (rather than gills), and like birds, they are warm-blooded.
No. Kakapo make their own nests and do not share them with any other birds.
No penguins don't share jobs.
Feathers
The Cassowary and Skua share this title as the cassowary is the most dangerous and skuas attack other birds and even humans.
Feathers
Fundamental characteristics that frogs and birds share include that they feed on other organisms and they move. Frogs and birds are vertebrates and they are multicellular.
This would include the ultrastructure of the cuticle. These creatures share this and many other features with the other annelids.
Theropod dinosaurs share many features with birds. Some include bones with honeycomb like air pockets that made them lighter, wishbones, and feathers. Further evidence comes from fossils like that of Archaeopteryx, which had features of dinosaurs and birds.
Desert
Penguins are birds and seals are mammals. They are not related biologically any more than any bird and any mammal can be said to be related through a common ancestor who lived millions of years ago and from whom both evolved. The only way in which seals and penguins are related is that they share the same habitats and may belong to a common food chain, as in, seals eating penguins.
Yes - however - they share their responsibilities with the father. Penguins usually pair for life - when one parent needs to go to sea to feed - the other takes over he incubation.