Possibly you meant "How do the birds keep warm . . ."? As for why they keep themselves warm, it is to stay alive.
A dense, waterproof covering of feathers and a layer of fat below the skin.
I suspect there's something wrong with how this question is formulated... But, acting on what's written - If they didn't keep warm they'd get cold, freeze and eventually die.
Tourists eat what is served on the ships that transport them to the shores of the continent.
A penguin lives in the tundra region, or icy regions known as the north and south pole.
The Southern Ocean surrounds the Antarctic continent.
pelicans range from every continent except for Antarctica and prefer to live in warm tempertures as well as tropical shores. pelicans range from every continent except for Antarctica and prefer to live in warm tempertures as well as tropical shores.
Fairy Penguins, now known as Little Penguins, nest on Tasmanian shores.
Depending on the economies and the extent of the expedition, explorers usually arrive at the continent's shores by ship or by chartered airplane.
No, penguins do not live in the jungle. Penguins are flightless birds that are found in colder regions, primarily in the Southern Hemisphere, such as Antarctica. They are well adapted to living in icy waters and on rocky shores, not in jungles.
No wildlife 'lives' on the shores of Antarctica, but many sea birds and sea mammals visit its beaches to breed.
The Fairy Penguin is found along the shores of Southern Australia, and New Zealand. They like the warmer waters and stay in the Southern Hemisphere. For more details, please see the site listed below.
The collective nouns for penguins are: a creche of penguins a colony of penguins a huddle of penguins a parade of penguins a rookery of penguins The emperor and Adélie colonies are distributed around the coastline of the Antarctic continent; the Magellanic penguin makes its home along the coastlines of South America, on both the Atlantic and Pacific shores; the African penguin gather off the islands of the coast of southwestern Africa; the rockhopper penguins inhabit shorelines of the islands north of Antarctica, from Chile to New Zealand.