
Emperor penguins may move in response to climate change
Researchers have long thought that emperor penguins were philopatric, meaning that they return to the same location each year to nest. New research -- using satellite imagery of the Antarctic -- shows that penguins may not be so faithful after all... #photo

Climate change winners - Adélie penguins
Most news about climate change does not bode well for the creatures that make their home in the polar regions of the earth. But one type of penguin could be an unexpected benefactor of climate change. In a new study looking at the penguin population on Beaufort Island, a small island in the Ross Sea (along the shores of Antarctica just south of New Zealand), researchers found that rising temperatures have opened up more of the ice-free land on which the island’s penguins thri