The term "Southern Hemisphere" refers to the part of Earth which is south of the equator. Some examples of birds found only here include the Black-Backed Gull, the King Cormorant and the Shy Albatross.
The best answer I can give is they live almost exclusively in the Southern hemisphere. Beyond that is highly variable.
No, penguins do not live in the Arctic. Penguins are primarily found in the Southern Hemisphere, with species living in diverse habitats such as Antarctica, South America, Africa, Australia, and New Zealand.
The mighty Nile is in the northern hemisphere. The Nile River is almost exclusively in the northern hemisphere, because the upper half of Africa is above the equator. However, tributaries of the "White Nile" extend south of Lake Victoria into Rwanda, and are therefore in the southern hemisphere. (see map at related links)
Penguins (order Sphenisciformes, family Spheniscidae) are a group of aquatic, flightless birds living almost exclusively in the Southern Hemisphere.
Seahorses seahorses look after ofspring exclusively
The Southern Hemisphere is almost 90% sea, thus being a rather uninhabitable hemisphere - more so than any of the others.
They are all members of the Class Aves. More specifically, they are all flightless birds, belonging to a group of birds called "ratites". Ratites are found almost exclusively within the Southern Hemisphere.
Europe is a continent that is almost entirely in the northern hemisphere, with the exception of a small portion of Turkey that lies in the southern hemisphere.
During northern hemisphere summer the sun is in the northern sky in the southern hemisphere. Our sun in the northern hemisphere is almost always in the southern sky unless your south of the tropic of cancer so this is why you have to reverse the sundials if you move to the southern hemisphere.
There are no penguins in the Arctic. Most species are found in the Antarctic.
It's in the northern hemisphere, and almost entirely also in the western one.
the pine biome...im doing the same lesson :)