Most still do, they're just very tiny.
Yes penguins have wings, however, they are more evolved as flippers for swimming and are useless towards flying. This is also why any pictures of penguins in the water look like they are "flying" in the water.
Penguins use their wings primarily for swimming rather than flying. Their wings have evolved into flippers that aid in navigating through water with agility and speed, allowing them to catch fish and evade predators. On land, penguins may use their wings for balance while waddling or to help them propel themselves when jumping onto ice or rocks.
Chicken, ostrich, penguins.
Penguins are the birds that use their wings as flippers.
Penguins use them for steering through the water.
Penguins are believed to have evolved from flying birds that existed around 60 million years ago. Over time, these birds adapted to an aquatic lifestyle, losing the ability to fly but gaining specialized features for life in the water, such as streamlined bodies and flipper-like wings.
A penguin's vestigial structure is its wings. Penguins have evolved to be flightless, so their wings are no longer used for flying. Instead, they have adapted to use their wings for swimming in the water.
No, penguins cannot fly. Their wing structures are evolved for swimming.No. They are one of the birds with feathers and wings who do not fly. They swim. Poor penguins.
Birds. They probably evolved from flying seabirds.
They do. Their wings just aren't made for flying, they're more like flippers. They help them fly through water instead of flying through the clouds.
Scientists think that penguins evolved from flying birds, similar to petrels and albatrosses, around 60 million years ago. Over time, they adapted to a more aquatic lifestyle, leading to their distinctive form and characteristics we see today.
Because it's a fact of life penguins' wings are made more for swimming than flying.