their body heat and their thick layer of fethers
No.
Penguins typically live in icy, cold biomes such as polar regions or the Antarctic biome. They are adapted to survive in harsh conditions, including cold temperatures and icy environments.
Penguins can survive because they have the sense to huddle which keeps them warm and also they dive in the water to collect food which is one of the main things they need to survive. All penguins have the sense to do lots of different things (unless they have a condition or are naturally dimmented!) By Alarna Diane McCord
polution
Penguins actually live in the Antarctic, not the Arctic. Penguins have several adaptations that help them survive, such as a layer of insulating blubber, waterproof feathers, and special glands to regulate body temperature. They also have a unique ability to dive deep for food and rely on a diet of fish and krill.
Some Emperor Penguins live on the Antarctic Peninsula, which is a tundra biome.
yes
The Artic Tundra.
No.
The Penguins biome is the Tundra
A biome is described as a ecosystem in the Artic. Penguins live in what is called the Tundra biome, located in the north.
Antartica.......Tundra.
They survive from food and hunting.
the tundra because they live in cold area's and it has water so you could say that they live in aquatic and the tundra but the tundra has water also so more tundra than aquatic.
Polar Bears can survive better in the cold tundra.
Penguins live in the continent of Antarctica.
It's too cold for tundra in Antarctica; there are no plants that can survive the cold to develop into tundra.