Yes, some of each group are becoming extinct
seals are still around. they are not yet extinct but are becoming extinct
Seals are not becoming extinct. Most seals are on the "Least concern" list.
There is no evidence that any kind of seal that lives in the waters around Antarctica is becoming extinct, and in fact, are all listed as of 'least concern' on lists of endangered animals.
Yes, seals are predators of penguins and will hunt them for food. Penguins are a common prey for certain seal species, such as leopard seals and Antarctic fur seals.
there are 64 penguins
Seals are penguins enemies.
Seals.
Seals are marine mammals; penguins are sea birds.
Seals and penguins are completely different animals. To start with, seals are mammals and penguins are birds, which means that penguins have wings, feathers and beaks while seals don't. Although the seals flippers look like wings, they aren't. They are used for swimming. Seals have fur. Some types of seals also eat penguins, but otherwise they both eat fish.
seals walk on there flipper's and they waddle on them like penguins waddle. but they are not penguins
Emperor penguins, Adelie penguins, flying birds, Elephant seals, Weddell seals and Leopard seals
The penguins preditors are the leapard seals, fur seals, sea lions, shark, killer whale, and on land their preditors are foxes, snakes, and sea gulls.