Emperor Penguin

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Emperor Penguin

Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Sphenisciformes
Family: Spheniscidae
Genus: Aptenodytes
Species: A. forsteri
Binomial name
Aptenodytes forsteri
Gray, 1844

The Emperor Penguin (Aptenodytes forsteri) is the tallest and heaviest of all living penguin species. It is endemic to Antarctica, and is the only penguin species that breeds during the Antarctic winter. Emperor Penguins mainly eat crustaceans (such as krill) but also occasionally take small fish and squid. In the wild, Emperor Penguins typically live for 20 years, but some records indicate a maximum lifespan of around 40 years. The Emperor Penguin should not be confused with the closely related King Penguin or the Royal Penguin.


Contents

Emperor Penguins, Ross Sea, Antarctica.
Emperor Penguins, Ross Sea, Antarctica.

Emperor Penguins are social animals, both foraging and nesting in groups. In severe weather the penguins huddle together for protection. They may be active day or night. Mature adults travel throughout most of the year between the nesting area and foraging areas in the ocean. From January to March, Emperor Penguins disperse into the oceans, traveling and foraging in groups. It is estimated that there are at least 250,000 Emperor Penguins, distributed into as many as 40 independent Antarctic colonies.

They normally dive to between 150 and 250 m (490 to 820 ft), although they can venture deeper, the deepest diving on record being 565 m (1870 ft). The longest they can hold their breath when underwater is 15 to 20 minutes. Their swimming speed is 6 to 9 km/h (4 to 6 mph), but they can achieve up to 19 km/h (12 mph) in short bursts. One of their feeding strategies is to dive to about 50 m (164 ft), where they can easily spot the sub-ice fish, Pagothenia borchgrevinki, swimming against the under surface of the sea-ice, which they then catch. They then dive again and repeat the sequence about half a dozen times before surfacing to breathe. They may also blow bubbles into the cracks in the ice to drive out the hiding fish.

On land they alternate between walking with a wobbling gait and sliding over the ice on their bellies, propelled by their feet and their flipper-like wings.

Emperor Penguin colony
Emperor Penguin colony

As a defense against the cold, Emperor Penguins stand in compact huddles (also known as the turtle formation) ranging in size between ten and many hundreds of birds, each leaning forward on a neighbor. Those on the outside tend to shuffle slowly around the edge of the turtle producing a slow churning action, giving each bird a turn on the inside and the outside.

Skua flying over Emperor Penguin chicks, Ross Sea, Antarctica.
Skua flying over Emperor Penguin chicks, Ross Sea, Antarctica.

In the wild, the Emperor Penguin's predators include birds, which prey on chicks and eggs, and aquatic mammals which prey upon both chicks and adult penguins. The primary bird predators are the Antarctic giant petrel (Macronectes giganteus) and the Skua. The primary aquatic mammal predators are the Leopard Seal, and orca.

The life-cycle of the Emperor Penguin
The life-cycle of the Emperor Penguin

Emperor Penguins first begin to breed at approximately five years of age. Emperor penguins travel about 90 km (56 mi) inland to reach the breeding site. The penguins start courtship in March or April, when the temperature can be as low as –40°C. Emperor Penguins are serially monogamous. They have only one mate each year, and stay faithful to that mate. However, the next year, most end up with different mates. Although they attempt to locate the previous year's mate in the next breeding season, most cannot find each other and choose a new mate.

In May or June, the female penguin lays one 450 gram (1 lb) egg, but at this point her nutritional reserves are exhausted and she must immediately return to the sea to feed. Very carefully, she transfers the egg to the male, who incubates the egg in his brood pouch for about 65 days consecutively without food by surviving on his fat reserves and spending the majority of the time sleeping to conserve energy. The transfer of the egg can be awkward and difficult, and many couples drop the egg in the process. When this happens, the chick inside is immediately lost as the egg cannot withstand the low temperatures on the icy ground. To survive the cold and winds of up to 200 km/h (120 mph), the males huddle together, taking turns in the middle of the huddle. They have also been observed with their backs to the wind to conserve body heat. If the chick hatches before the mother's return, the father sets the chick on his feet and covers it with his pouch, feeding it a white, milky substance produced by a gland in his esophagus.

Emperor Penguin feeding a chick
Emperor Penguin feeding a chick

After about two months, the female returns. She finds her mate among the hundreds of fathers via his call and takes over caring for the chick, feeding it by regurgitating the food that she has stored in her stomach. The male then leaves to take his turn at sea. His trip is slightly shorter than before, because the melting of ice in the summer gradually decreases the distance between the breeding site and the open sea. After another few weeks, the male returns and both parents tend to the chick by keeping it off the ice and feeding it regurgitated food. About two months after the egg hatches, as the weather becomes milder, the chicks huddle in a crèche for warmth and protection, still fed by their parents.

Eventually, both the chick and parents return to the sea and spend the rest of the summer feeding there. At the end of the summer the whole inland trip is repeated for all those penguins of breeding age, while the younger ones stay at the sea edge.

egg
egg

The Emperor Penguin, along with nine other species of penguin, is currently being considered for placement under the Endangered Species Protection Act. The primary reasons for this are declining food availability due to the effects of climate change, and industrial fisheries on the crustacean and fish populations. Other reasons for their placement on this list include such things as disease, foreign and introduced predators (this is more so for the other species of penguin than it is the Emperor), habitat destruction, and disturbance at breeding colonies by humans. The ruling for this will be introduced by November of this year, with protection commencing one year after.

  • Apsley Cherry-Garrard, the Antarctic explorer said: "Take it all in all, I do not believe anybody on Earth has a worse time than an Emperor Penguin."[1]
  • The Emperor Penguin has been the subject of several documentaries. In 1993, the species was featured in the BBC series Life in the Freezer, hosted by David Attenborough. In 2005, the French documentary La Marche de l'empereur (released as March of the Penguins in the U.S.) spotlit the penguins' reproductive cycle. The BBC and Attenborough covered the Emperor again in the 2006 series Planet Earth.
  • The computer-animated movie Happy Feet (2006) features Emperor Penguins as its primary characters, with one in particular that loves to dance, depicting them as endangered by a shrinking food supply.
  • The computer-animated move Surf's Up (2007) features a genius Emperor penguin surfer named, Zeke " Big-Z" Topanga. Numerous Emperor penguin chicks are featured.
  • The NHL's Pittsburgh Penguins Franchise is named after the Emperor Penguin, And an emperor Penguin Leads the Team onto the Ice each year prior to the start of the first home game of the season.

  • Deguine, Jean-Claude. 1974. Emperor Penguin: Bird of the Antarctic. The Stephen Greene Press, Vermont.
  • Rivolier, Jean. 1956. Emperor Penguins. Elek Books, London.
  • Williams, T. (1995). The Penguins. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. 
  • (1997) "Emperor Penguin", Great Book of Birds. Philadelphia: Courage Books. 
  • National Geographic CritterCAM additional feature on DVD version of March of the Penguins
  • Willy Puchner, Penguins - Traveling the World

  1. ^ Apsley Cherry-Garrard. From the Introduction to The Worst Journey in the World.

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