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1. Studying variability of parental foraging and provisioning behaviour in relation to reproductive success is fundamental to improving understanding of regulation of reproductive effort in animals.
Adélie penguins seem to have passed a portion of the mirror test, in which animals that see their reflection in a mirror appear to recognise that they are seeing themselves and not another ...
A wildlife photographer captured a rare photo of five different penguin species congregating on the South Sandwich Islands.
Animals An Antarctic penguin ends up on New Zealand shore, roughly 2,000 miles from home Updated November 13, 20213:58 PM ET ...
A group of scientists studying Adélie penguins and climate change have found that the color of penguin droppings indicates whether the animals ate shrimp-like krill (reddish orange) or silverfish ...
Penguins may have joined the small roster of animals that have passed the mirror test, believed to be the benchmark for a sense of self. Until now, the only animals to have passed have included a ...
Across oceans, deserts, forests, and ice, certain animals pull off epic road trips. What’s exceptional is that some of their ...
Scientists say they’ve seen ammonia emitted from penguin poop result in the creation of fog. The clouds created may be helping to shield the animals from the effects of human-caused climate change ...
Pingu the penguin was fed and treated for dehydration and then release back into the wild.
For 6,000 years, Adélie penguins have unknowingly documented the changing climate of Antarctica—not in journals or fossils, but through their poop. In a groundbreaking study published in Nature ...
An Adélie penguin named "Pingu" washed up on the coast of New Zealand Wednesday, almost 2,000 miles from its home in Antarctica.
The penguin named Pingu was spotted on New Zealand's Canterbury beach on Thursday, Nov. 10, by Harry Singh, according to reports.