No.
All penguins are sea birds and they make their homes in sea water where they can find food.
Four types of penguins do, however, breed on Antarctica's beaches for a few weeks each year: Emperor, Adelie, Gentoo and Chinstrap.
Penguins are native to Antarctica and can only be found there. :)
No, Adelie Penguins also live on Antarctica. The amazing thing about Emperor Penguins is that they breed in one of the coldest parts of Antarctica, where the temperature can get to -30F!
The exact popluation of the penguins of Antarctica would be very hard to find. But surprisingly, only about two of seventeen species of penguins live there. They are the Adelie and Gentoo penguins, so, on the movie Happyfeet, they are inadequently wrong by showing the Rockhopper in the same environment as the others. Most species of penguins live in South America, Africa, Australia and New Zealand.
Of the 17 known species of penguins, only two of them actually breed on Antarctica. For more information, see the related link.
Antarctica
No penguins live permanently on the continent: penguins are sea birds that live at sea. However, at least two types of penguins breed on Antarctica's beaches, the Emperor and the Adelie.
yes emperor penguins are one of the seven Antarctic penguins and is one of the only two species that actually live on mainland Antarctica.
I think only penguins live there.
Penguins actually mostly live in the southern hemisphere, with only one species, the Galapagos penguin, found in the northern hemisphere. The majority of penguin species are found in Antarctica, South Africa, Australia, and South America.
Of the 17 species of penguins, there are only fourspecies which live at Antarctica: Adelie, Emperor, Chinstrapand Gentoo penguins. The Antarctic is not their only range.
No. They only live in Antarctica. No penguins of any kind live anywhere in the Arctic.
They only live together in zoos; in the wild, polar bears live in the Arctic (north) and penguins live in the Antarctic (south).