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Penguins: A Visual Study of All 17 Species―Natural Behavior, Colonies, and Life on Land and Sea

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What is it about penguins that makes them so lovable? Perhaps we identify with their almost-human gait on land, or their ability to survive in the harshest of climates, or their extremely social nature. Penguins is the rare book that combines a fabulous visual study of these creatures with up-to-date information on all seventeen species, from the largest (Emperor Penguin) to the tiniest (the aptly named Little Penguin). Through the text and pictures, the reader will learn all about life in their colonies, and how they live on land and sea, raise and feed their chicks, and manage their long, annual migrations. Brutus Östling's amazing photography completely captures the nature of these creatures. Looking at the images makes one feel as if the birds were posing for the camera; Östling has a knack for capturing them in the most natural of settings, going about their daily activities, at work or at play.

192 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2006

18 people want to read

About the author

Brutus Östling

23 books1 follower

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Berit Lundqvist.
696 reviews25 followers
November 14, 2018
A photo book full of adorable penguins. The pictures are absolutely fantastic, but the text is a little too long and stiff for my taste. There’s is definitely an upper limit to how much I really want to know about penguins.
Profile Image for Joy Wilson.
261 reviews6 followers
February 17, 2015
This is a great coffee table book about penguins. It has great text and beautiful photos. I learned quite a bit about the different types of penguins and penguins life and behavior. The text is well written and succinct, the photography is excellent. If you like large print photo books, this is certainly a good choice.
Profile Image for sweet orange books.
669 reviews8 followers
July 19, 2023


- The King Penguin can dive to 1,100 ft (340m) and stay underwater for almost 15 minutes.

- The Emperor Penguin can survive temperatures down to -75°F (-60°C).

Penguin Distribution

32 extinct penguin have been identified and documented with the help of fossil finds. Their identification was possible because penguins have a redundant leg joint, and the breastbone to which their powerful wing muscle are attached is uniquely shaped. 17 (arguably 18) species are currently found, and they all live in the southern hemisphere.

Penguins have been around for millions of years, but the Adélie Penguin did not arrive in the Antarctic until approximatively 6,000 years ago. Because these birds need firm, ice-free ground for their nests, they were unable to settle there while the continent was still covered in ice.

The smallest penguin species live near the equator - on the Galápagos Islands for example - while larger species such as the Emperor Penguin are found in the Antarctic. This is known as the The Bergmann's Rule. In 1847, the zoologist Carl Bergmann established that individuals of a species are smaller the closer they are to the equator and that they increase in size nearer the poles. This is because warm-blooded animals with a large body volume in relation to to surface area are better adapted to storing heat and conserving energy in cold climates than smaller individuals.

Like all other penguins, King Penguins live near a food supply. They spend the breeding and molting seasons on islands, but, because they are well adapted to long-distance swimming and deep diving, the rest of the time they remain in the sea. Where cold water from the bottom of the ocean reaches the surface along the rim of the Antarctic ice shelves, it carries nutrients to the surface, and so there is a rich food supply here. In one year, a million pairs of King Penguins eat approximately 750,000 tons of lanternfish and 65,000 tons of squid. This is about 1% of the total stock of lanternfish of the entire Southern Ocean. Together with other marine birds and mammals, they have a major impact on the local food chains.

It's easy to recognize an active penguin colony. It is just as easy to spot an abandoned colony by the dark green carpet of lush vegetation that covers the previously exposed ground. The soil often remains high in nutrients for hundreds, even thousands, of years after the colony has been abandoned. While it is populated, however, not many plants are able to stand the high levels of nitrates and phosphates combined with the constant wear from penguins feet. Lichen and grass can form on the outskirts or on protruding rocks within the colony.

When it is time to breed, King Penguins start to look for a place where they can incubate their eggs and raise their young together with other penguins - this ensures that there are always other birds around to feed the young. It takes more than a year to raise a chick, molt, and eat in preparation for the next season, which is why King Penguins are able to breed only in only two years out of three.

All penguins species, including the Gentoo, are believed to have emerged somewhere near the center of the Gondwanaland continent at the point where South America, Africa, and Antarctica started to drift apart.

The largest penguin species are able to incubate only a single egg, which they keep warm under a fold of skin on top of their feet. Magellanic Penguins, on the other hand, nest in burrows and normally incubate two eggs at a time by lying on them.


5 reviews
February 25, 2019
Excellent photography, even sparking the “strong but cute” gentoo chick memes that went around recently
Profile Image for The Bookish Wombat.
782 reviews14 followers
August 10, 2014
A beautiful large format book of penguin photos with some information about the different species and their behaviour on each page.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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