Chinstrap Penguin

From Japari Library, the Kemono Friends Wiki
Revision as of 10:28, 11 June 2022 by Pienump87 (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Chinstrap Penguin

Chinstrap PenguinOriginal.png

Character Data
Japanese Name: ヒゲペンギン
Romanised Name: Higepengin
First Featured in: Kemono Friends Pavilion
Animal Data
Scientific Name: Pygoscelis antarcticus
Distribution: Unknown
Diet: Piscivore
Average Lifespan in the Wild: 15 – 20 years
Read More: Chinstrap penguin
Conservation Status: Status iucn3.1 LC.svg.png
Chinstrap Penguin Festival Pavilion KF3 Gallery

“I don't understand why I feel lonely... I should feel better when I'm with other people then, but I just end up getting angry and saying terrible things to them.
Iwabee: "Hey, Higeppe! Gonna be metal today?"
"Shut up, rock-for-brains! I'll yank your dumb yellow pigtails!"”

Chinstrap Penguin's introduction

Chinstrap Penguin is a type of penguin Friend that premiered in the fourth official Kemono Friends guidebook.

Appearance

Chinstrap Penguin has black hair that is half white at the top, with a dark blue-grey section on the fringe representing a beak. The rest of her hair, which comes past her shoulders, is plain black. Her eyes are red, and she wears black wireless in-ear headphones with a red circle on the earpiece. She has a black and white sweater with mittens attached to the sleeves like other penguins. The collar is pure white, as well as most of the frontal area and the inner arms. Her tail is pure black and reaches past her knees. She wears white mid-calf socks, and pale red boots with black toes and laces.

Series Appearances

Appearances In Kemono Friends Media
Media Role

In Real Life

This image is of the Chinstrap Penguin. Credit for the image goes to a-z-animals.com

The Chinstrap Penguin are a small species of penguin found in rocky areas of the Antarctic Ocean. Their name derives from the narrow black band under their heads. This also means they are one of the most identifiable penguins in the species. They have a black bill, and when young, can have spotting around their eyes and a slightly shorter bill than an adult Chinstrap Penguin. They are medium-sized penguins, with a height up to 70 cm and can weigh up to 6 kilograms.

Chinstrap Penguins are carnivorous birds who normally feed on small prey such as fish, krill, shrimp, and squid. Like most other penguins, they have tightly-packed feathers, which make them waterproof and incredibly excellent swimmers, swimming at 30 kilometers an hour. However, they are rather shallow compared to other penguins in terms of diving depth, where they can only dive as deep as 70 metres at a time.

Chinstrap Penguins live around 20 years, and there are a population of around 13,000,000 to 15,000,000 Chinstrap Penguins alive, so they are in no state near being endangered. They live in large colonies, sometimes with over hundreds of thousands of Chinstrap Penguins at a time. Their national predators are Leopard Seals, Sea Lions, Orcas and Sharks. Eggs and young chicks are also vulnerable to seabirds such as Skua. This is why many adult Chinstrap Penguins stay with their young at all times, to protect them while they need it most. At times, only one adult stays with the young while the other goes to get food.

Trivia

Two chinstrap penguins, Roy and Silo, caused a lot of controversy by trying to perform mating rituals and trying to hatch a rock as an egg despite being both penguins being male. Their keepers gave them an egg that was from a breeding pair that couldn't hatch it. The egg hatched and the couple raised the baby named Tango.

References

http://www.penguinworld.com/types/chinstrap.html

https://oceanwide-expeditions.com/to-do/wildlife/chinstrap-penguin

https://a-z-animals.com/animals/chinstrap-penguin/

Bird Friends
Auks
Atlantic PuffinGreat AukTufted Puffin
Birds-of-Paradise
Greater Bird-Of-ParadiseGreater LophorinaWestern Parotia
Birds of Prey Guadalupe CaracaraKing VultureLappet-Faced VultureNorthern GoshawkPeregrine FalconSecretarybirdStriated Caracara
Eagles Bald EagleGolden EagleHarpy EagleMartial Eagle
Owls Barn OwlEurasian Eagle-OwlForest OwletKyushu OwlNorthern White-Faced OwlSpectacled Owl
Columbids
DodoPassenger PigeonRock Dove
Gruiformes
Grey Crowned CraneOkinawa RailRed-Crowned CraneWhite-Naped Crane
Gulls
Black-Tailed GullCommon GullRoss's Gull
Pelecaniformes Great White PelicanPink-Backed PelicanShoebill
Ibises Black-Headed IbisCrested IbisScarlet Ibis
Penguins
Adélie PenguinAfrican PenguinChinstrap PenguinEmperor PenguinGentoo PenguinHumboldt PenguinKing PenguinNew Zealand Giant PenguinRoyal PenguinSouthern Rockhopper Penguin
Phasianids
ChickenChukar PartridgeGreen PheasantIndian PeafowlRed JunglefowlWhite Peafowl
Piciformes
Acorn WoodpeckerCampo FlickerGreater Honeyguide
Ratites
Common OstrichEmuGreater RheaNorth Island Giant MoaSouthern Brown KiwiSouthern Cassowary
Waterfowl
Black SwanEastern Spot-Billed DuckEgyptian GooseTundra Swan
Miscellaneous Birds
Arctic TernAustralian BrushturkeyBlue-and-Yellow MacawCommon CuckooGastornisGoldcrestGreat CormorantGreat HornbillGreater FlamingoGreater RoadrunnerHelmeted GuineafowlJapanese Bush WarblerJapanese CormorantLarge-Billed CrowLong-Tailed TitMarvelous SpatuletailMasked BoobyMedium Tree FinchOriental StorkResplendent QuetzalRhinoceros HornbillRock PtarmiganScarlet MacawSuperb LyrebirdSuzakuWhite StorkYatagarasu