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A penguin is not a land animal. This animal can swim and dive in water. they catch their food in water too.
Yes a sea lion can very well eat a penguin.
yes it is
75% of their life
The Classication of little penguin is sea mermaids
No penguin 'lives' in Antarctica. However, the Emperor Penguin and the Adelie Penguin both come to Antarctica's beaches to breed. Otherwise these animals are sea birds.
Of the 21 known species four live in Antarctica: The Adelie, the Macaroni, the Chinstrap and the Emperor.
The Adélie Penguin is a type of penguin common along the entire Antarctic coast and Africa along its nearby islands. They consume Antarctic sea creatures, such as squid and krill.
There is actually a slice of Antarctica, just to the west of the Ross Sea, named Adelie Land, and this is the origin of the penguin's name. This slice of Antarctica is claimed by the French, but the Antarctic Treaty annuls all such claims. Dumont D'Urville named it after his wife. The French station there is named after the explorer. Adelie penguins are a small penguin that live in a populous colony, and are about 450 - 500 mm tall. They construct a nest from stones to keep the eggs elevated from the water melt in the spring. They catch fish and krill at sea.
No penguins live in Antarctica. Two types of penguins breed on Antarctica's beaches: Adelie and Emperor. Penguins are sea birds and live at sea.
Breeds on coasts of the Antarctic continent and surrounding islands; non-breeding distribution is not well known. Within home range, they breed wherever land is http://www.answers.com/topic/ice-free and access from the sea is feasible. -earleykids :)
Emperor penguins do not live in Antarctica, they are sea birds and live at sea. However, they do join their cousins, the Adelie penguins, when both types visit Antarctica's beaches to breed.
It is on the ice burg on the jagged piece at the top!
No. All penguins are sea birds and they make their homes in sea water where they can find food. Four types of penguins do, however, breed on Antarctica's beaches for a few weeks each year: Emperor, Adelie, Gentoo and Chinstrap.
penguin, polar bear, sea lion......
Land ice is very important to sea levels, because when it melts, all the water that was on land moves into the oceans. Sea ice melting will not raise sea levels, because it is already in the water.
Breeds on coasts of the Antarctic continent and surrounding islands; non-breeding distribution is not well known. Within home range, they breed wherever land is http://www.answers.com/topic/ice-free and access from the sea is feasible. -earleykids :)