News

Emperor penguins live in some of the most remote and environmentally pristine regions in the world. But that doesn't mean they're safe from the impacts of a warming planet.
Emperor penguin populations are falling much faster than expected. Ice is melting beneath their chicks before they’re ready.
Call that a peng-win! SeaWorld San Diego welcomed an emperor penguin chick, the first time the threatened species was born in the Western Hemisphere in nearly 13 years.
Another way penguins move quickly across land is by jumping out of the water and sliding on ice, or by lying down and tobogganing on their bellies to slide along the surface and rest their feet.
In 2018, however, two emperor penguins shattered this long-held assumption after they stumbled upon a strange object lying on the expanse of sea ice.
An emperor penguin was rescued from an Australian beach after presumably making a 2,000-mile trek from its Antarctic habitat.
“This is the furthest north I’ve heard of an emperor penguin,” an expert said. By Victor Mather It was a day as Australian as you can get: Sun, waves and surfing at the beach. And then ...
An emperor penguin surprised locals when it appeared on a beach in Australia after making an epic journey of thousands of miles from its home in Antarctica.
The penguin, the first of its species to be found in Australia, appeared to be malnourished and is now being cared for by a wildlife caretaker, a government department said.
An emperor penguin found earlier this month in Denmark, Australia — about 2,200 miles off the Antarctic coast — is reportedly being cared for by a wildlife expert.