Discover 5 of the Countries and Regions Where Most Penguins Live

Source:AZ Animals Time:14/10/2023

As a kid, you might remember seeing cartoons of Santa’s house at the North Pole, maybe with a couple of polar bears lounging in the background and a few penguins toddling around. In reality, polar bears live only in the Northern Hemisphere, and penguins almost exclusively in the Southern. So they each live geographically closer to tropical tigers and flamingos than to each other! Explore with us now where penguins live and how well they’re surviving.

Discover 5 of the Countries and Regions Where Most Penguins Live

Penguins live in the Southern Hemisphere in the areas bordering the Antarctic Sea and the South Pacific.

©au_uhoo/Shutterstock.com

What Are Penguins?

Birds Built for Land and Sea

Discover 5 of the Countries and Regions Where Most Penguins Live

©David Herraez Calzada/Shutterstock.com

Penguins are flightless marine birds that split their time between the land and sea. Their wings are modified into flippers that make them powerful swimmers. Penguins like fast food: they swallow fish, squid, and krill that they catch and swallow whole while swimming. Their slick plumage makes them streamlined in the water, but it also holds in a layer of air next to their bodies that helps keep them warm and buoyant in the water. Penguins have a remarkable adaptation that allows them to drink salt water, filter out the salt in their bloodstream, and blow it out their nose in mucus.

Penguins have a distinctive black-and-white tuxedo-like color pattern that serves as ingenious camouflage. When swimming, an orca or seal looking up would have trouble seeing its white belly in the light from above. If the penguin was below the predator, the penguin’s black back would be camouflaged against the dark ocean depths. Depending on the species, penguins can have orange, red, or yellow on their beaks, feet, and around the head or yellow shading around the neck and breast.

Pick a Size

Discover 5 of the Countries and Regions Where Most Penguins Live

The largest species are the Emperor penguins. The young are covered in irresistibly soft grey fuzz.

©Michel VIARD/ via Getty Images

Believe it or not, fossils of prehistoric penguins show they could get as big and heavy as an adult human being! Today, the emperor penguin is the largest species, growing up to 3.5 feet tall and weighing 77 pounds. Picking one up would feel like lifting two cinder blocks. The smallest surviving modern species is the little blue penguin or fairy penguin which is only about a foot tall and weighs 2.5-3 pounds. Scooping that one up would be like carrying a laptop computer, but squishier.

Where Do Penguins Live?

Discover 5 of the Countries and Regions Where Most Penguins Live

The Galapagos penguin is the only species found north of the Equator. Smaller penguin species live further north than the larger species.

©/1309102624 via Getty Images

There are about 40 million penguins in the world divided into 17-20 species. Eight of these live in Antarctica and islands in the Antarctic Sea. The rest inhabit the islands and coastlines of South America, Southern Africa, and Australia. The Galapagos penguin is the only species that lives in the Northern Hemisphere, in the Galapagos Islands, of course. Species that live further north tend to be smaller and can live in temperate or even tropical habitats. Larger species live further south in extremely cold habitats. Unfortunately, the populations of most species are in decline due to climate change and overfishing.

Countries and Regions With the Most Penguins

1. Antarctica

Discover 5 of the Countries and Regions Where Most Penguins Live

The loss of sea ice in Antarctica where penguins fish and nest close to their food source is driving some species closer to extinction.

©Eleanor Scriven/Shutterstock.com

Antarctica is an international territory that does not belong to any one country. It has about 12 million penguins. Eight species live on the continent and nearby islands: the emperor, Adelie, chinstrap, Gentoo, king, macaroni, Magellanic, and rockhopper. Global warming has caused a significant melt-off of Antarctic ice that has threatened penguin habitats. Overfishing has further stressed them, to the point that some colonies have declined by up to 50% and a colony on the Antarctic Peninsula has died off completely.

2. New Zealand

Discover 5 of the Countries and Regions Where Most Penguins Live

The yellow-eyed penguin is one of the most threatened species in New Zealand.

©Anders Peter Photography/Shutterstock.com

Some sources say there are as few as three species of penguins in New Zealand, but others note that considering all the country’s outlying islands and dependencies and birds that frequently pass through the area, 13 of the world’s penguin species have actually been seen there. Of these, the yellow-eyed penguin is most threatened by loss of habitat. It lives in forests and shrublands that over the years have been cleared for farming and ranching. Warming seawater has forced cold-water food sources like krill further south, threatening penguins’ food supply. The extensive fishing industry in New Zealand waters also kills large numbers of penguins that drown after getting entangled in fishing nets. Because so many species live in this country’s jurisdiction, New Zealand is critical to the survival of many penguin species.

3. South Africa and Namibia

Discover 5 of the Countries and Regions Where Most Penguins Live

Only about 15,000 mating pairs of African penguins remain in the wild.

©Sergey Uryadnikov/Shutterstock.com

The only species of penguin native to Africa is the African black-footed penguin. They live only in South Africa and neighboring Namibia. As humans are thought to have originated in Africa, it’s possible this penguin species is the first to have been discovered by people. Because African penguins live in warmer climates, they burrow in the ground during the day and come out at dusk and at twilight. They have a pink gland over their eyes they use to dissipate excess body heat by forcing blood into it. Only about 15,000 breeding pairs remain and they are in decline at a rate of 2% a year. In addition to environmental factors, these penguins are threatened by human consumption of their eggs.

4. Chile

Discover 5 of the Countries and Regions Where Most Penguins Live

Magellanic penguins are one of the species that breed along the coasts of Chile, Argentina, and Brazil.

©Ondrej Prosicky/Shutterstock.com

Chile has 10 species of penguins: the king, emperor, Gentoo, Adelie, chinstrap, rockhopper, macaroni, Humbolt, Magellanic, and little penguins. Magellanic penguins breed on both the Pacific and Atlantic coasts of South America. Penguin watchers have sighted them as far north as Rio de Janeiro. About 20,000 breeding pairs live in Chile. Three desert islands off the country’s coast are home to 80% of the world’s Humboldt penguin population, a vulnerable species.

5. Australia

Discover 5 of the Countries and Regions Where Most Penguins Live

The little penguin, or fairy penguin, is the world’s smallest species. Its range includes the southern coast of Australia.

©Aaron Jacobs / Creative Commons

Ten different species of penguins frequent Australian waters, including the king, emperor, Gentoo, Adelie, chinstrap, rockhopper, Fiordland, erect-crested, macaroni, and Magellanic. However, the little penguin or fairy penguin is the only species that has breeding colonies in Australia, on the south coast. Fortunately, little penguins are not endangered. The IUCN considers them a species of “least concern” by the IUCN. Nevertheless, Australia takes the protection of this tourist-charming species seriously. In fact, in 2009 wildlife officials hired marksmen to shoot foxes and dogs that were threatening a small colony of them near Sydney! With armed bodyguards, little penguins are likely to be around for a long time to come!

How Can You Help Penguins?

Discover 5 of the Countries and Regions Where Most Penguins Live

One of the best ways you can protect penguins and other marine life is to limit your use of plastics to reduce the amount of pollution that makes its way into the oceans.

©Rich Carey/Shutterstock.com

Conservation agencies recommend ideas like these that you can do to help penguins, and other endangered species in the process:

  • Avoid single-use plastics and recycle the plastics you use. Plastic in the ocean is a major environmental threat.
  • Participate in a beach cleanup effort to remove plastics.
  • Purchase sustainable seafood that is harvested in a way that does not harm penguins and other threatened marine species.
  • Donate to penguin conservation nonprofit organizations.
  • Write to government officials in your country and in countries that host penguins to express your support for conservation efforts. This may not seem like much, but it keeps the issue in front of policymakers’ attention.
  • Consider going on an ecotourism adventure to see penguins after carefully researching an ethical organization. Ecotourism creates a powerful financial incentive for governments and local citizens to conserve endangered species.

RECENT POSTS

When Is Cockroach Season in Hawaii?

If you’re grossed out by the mere sight of cockroaches scrambling across on the floor around you, you’re not alone. Cockroaches are considered some of the p...
14/10/2023
When Is Cockroach Season in Hawaii?

Jealous Grizzly Bear Chucks His Comrade Down a Water Fall To Steal His Perch

Watching animal fights take place in the wild can be an exciting and thrilling experience. Watching the power that predatorial animals hold in their hands, or...
14/10/2023
Jealous Grizzly Bear Chucks His Comrade Down a Water Fall To Steal His Perch

The Busiest Airports in British Columbia Ranked

Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Beautiful aerial panoramic view of the modern city under the “Northern Lights”.©EB Adventure Photography/Shut...
14/10/2023
The Busiest Airports in British Columbia Ranked

Edo Period in Japan: History, Timeline, and Important Sights

Medieval Japan — characterized by a combination of feudal lords, warring clans, and political prowess, dissipated with the end of the Azuchi-Momoyama period....
14/10/2023
Edo Period in Japan: History, Timeline, and Important Sights

Where Was Bridge to Terabithia Filmed? Visit, Wildlife, and More!

When Jesse Aarons loses the footrace he’s trained all summer for to the new girl in town, it seems to be a recipe for a terrible school year. However, the ne...
14/10/2023
Where Was Bridge to Terabithia Filmed? Visit, Wildlife, and More!

How Fast Are Deer? Top Speeds and How It Compares to Its Predators

There’s something wildly beautiful and majestic about deer. These beautiful mammals exist in nature with so many interesting facts to back them up. To start...
14/10/2023
How Fast Are Deer? Top Speeds and How It Compares to Its Predators

909 Angel Number: Discover the Powerful Meanings and Symbolism

As you experience the end of a chapter, you have to turn the page. Let the new phase come to life as you walk forward with faith, knowing you can use each exp...
14/10/2023
909 Angel Number: Discover the Powerful Meanings and Symbolism

The 10 Largest Fish Ever Caught in Kansas

Kansas, with its vast landscapes, also has a claim to fame in the fishing community. Even though a landlocked state, its waters have witnessed anglers making...
14/10/2023
The 10 Largest Fish Ever Caught in Kansas

Meiji Period in Japan: History, Timeline, and Important Sights

If you were to visit Japan in the mid-1800s, you may think you’ve stepped back in time to medieval Europe. While the Edo period ensured the country was finally...
14/10/2023
Meiji Period in Japan: History, Timeline, and Important Sights

What Do Birds Eat in the Winter? 5 Common Foods

When the chilly winter months descend, birds face a significant challenge: finding enough food to stay nourished. But despite frozen or snow covered ground, b...
14/10/2023
What Do Birds Eat in the Winter? 5 Common Foods

CATEGORY