Penguins are antarctic where you also find the south pole. Different species of penguins go farther north, but none into the northern hemisphere. These animals are sea birds and find their food chain in ocean water.
none in the north pole
No, but the Galapagos penguins sometimes cross the equator.
no they all live in the southern hemisphere.
They are found in Antarctica which is in the Southern Hemisphere.
No. Penguins live in the southern hemisphere, while walruses live in the northern hemisphere.
No. Penguins are species of the southern (Antarctic) hemisphere not the northern (Arctic) hemisphere. However the Galapagos islands (on the equator) do have a viable natural colony of penguins.
The northern hemisphere counterpart would be the Auk. Auks are from a completely different evolutionary family than penguins. Auks can fly but look and act a lot like penguins. Penguins and auks are a good example of evolutionary convergence.
Polar bears are in the northern hemisphere, while penguins are in the southern hemisphere. If they ever met, the penguins would be eaten.
Penguins live in the southern hemisphere, polar bears live in the northern hemisphere. So polar bears do not eat penguins.
no. because they only live in the southern hemisphere.
Taigas have snows and coniferous trees. What you are thinking of is an arctic tundra which is where penguins live .
Southern except for those that live in northern zoos Expanded answer: Well hi they live n the southern hemisphere
Penguins found in Alaskan waters likely reach the Northern Hemisphere by fishing boat rather than by swimming, report University of Washington researchers. Penguins, except for a species found in the Galapagos at the Equator, are naturally found exclusively in the Southern Hemisphere.