Melbourne, Australia — The only emperor penguin known to have swum from Antarctica to Australia was released at sea 20 days after he waddled ashore on a popular tourist beach, officials said Friday.
As climate change bears down on Antarctica, understanding why some penguins end up meandering so far from their natural ...
Rescuers are trying to rehabilitate an emperor penguin that came ashore some 2,000 miles from its natural habitat, and what ...
The first emperor penguin found in Australia has been released after spending 20 days in the care of a wildlife expert, the ...
After nearly three weeks of care, the first emperor penguin found in Australia has been returned to the wild. Dubbed 'Gus' by ...
An emperor penguin that swam 3,500km from Antarctica to Australia was released back into the chilly waters of the Southern ...
An emperor penguin was rescued from an Australian beach after presumably making a 2,000-mile trek from its Antarctic habitat.
The adult male was found on Nov. 1 on a popular tourist beach in the town of Denmark in temperate southwest Australia ...
The emperor penguin was malnourished, alone — and on a popular beach in southwest Australia, waddling through the sand more than 2,000 miles from its natural habitat. Visitors to Ocean Beach ...
The largest penguin species has never been reported in Australia before, University of Western Australia research fellow Belinda Cannell said, though some had reached New Zealand, nearly all of ...
Standing there on the beach in the small town of Denmark in Western Australia on Friday afternoon was a male emperor penguin, about 2,100 miles from where one might expect to find it, in Antarctica.