Thanks to Page for suggesting we talk about penguins this week!\n\nA big birthday shout-out to EllieHorseLover this week too!\n\nFurther reading:\n\nMarch of the penguins (in Norway)\n\nRare Yellow Penguin Bewilders Scientists\n\nGiant Waikato penguin: school kids discover new species\n\nAn ordinary king penguin with the rare "yellow" king penguin spotted in early 2021 (photo by Yves Adams, taken from article linked above):\n\n\n\nShow transcript:\nWelcome to Strange Animals Podcast. I\u2019m your host, Kate Shaw.\nI was looking over the ideas list recently and noticed that Page had suggested we cover a specific bird way back in 2020! It\u2019s about time we get to it, so thanks to Page we\u2019re going to learn about penguins this week, including a penguin mystery.\nBut first, we have a birthday shout-out! Happy birthday to EllieHorseLover, whose birthday comes right before next week\u2019s episode comes out. Have a fantastic birthday, Ellie, and I agree with you about horses. They are awesome and so are you.\n Also, a quick correction from last week\u2019s episode about Dolly the dinosaur. If you listened to episode 264 the day it came out, you heard the incorrect version, but I was able to correct it and upload the new version late that day. Many thanks to Llewelly, who pointed out that Dolly hasn\u2019t actually been identified as a Diplodocus, just as a sauropod in the family Diplodocidae. Paleontologists are still studying the fossil and probably will be for some time. Also, I said that sauropods aren\u2019t related to birds but that\u2019s not the case. Sauropods share a common ancestor with birds and that\u2019s why they both have the same kind of unusual respiratory system.\nSo, speaking of birds, it\u2019s time to learn about penguins! We\u2019ve talked about penguins twice before, but not recently at all. It\u2019s about time we really dug into the topic.\nPenguins live in the southern hemisphere, including Antarctica. The only exception is the Galapagos penguin, which we talked about in episode 99, which lives just north of the equator. Penguins are considered aquatic birds because they\u2019re so well adapted to swimming and they spend most of their time in the ocean finding food. Instead of wings, their front limbs are flippers that they use to maneuver in the water. They\u2019re incredibly streamlined too, with a smooth, dense coat of feathers to help keep them warm in cold water without slowing them down.\nOne of the ways a penguin keeps from freezing in the bitterly cold winters of Antarctica and in cold water is by a trick of anatomy that most other animals don\u2019t have. The artery that supplies blood to the flippers crosses over the veins that return blood from the flippers deeper into the body. The arterial blood is warm since it\u2019s been through the body\u2019s core, but the blood that has just traveled through the flippers has lost a lot of heat. Because the veins and the arteries cross several times, the cold venal blood is warmed by the warm arterial blood where the blood vessels touch, which means the blood returning into the body\u2019s core is warm enough that it doesn\u2019t chill the body.\nPenguins groom their feathers carefully to keep them clean and spread oil over them. The oil and the feathers\u2019 nanostructures keep them from icing over when a penguin gets out of the water in sub-zero temperatures. The feathers are not only super-hydrophobic, meaning they repel water, their structure acts as an anti-adhesive. That means ice can\u2019t stick to the feathers no matter how cold it is. In 2016 researchers created a nanofiber membrane that repels water and ice with the same nanostructures found in penguin feathers. It could eventually be used to ice-proof electrical wires and airplane wings.\nPenguin feathers also trap a thin layer of air, which helps the penguin stay buoyant in the water and helps keep its skin warm and dry.\nWhile a penguin is awkward on land, it\u2019s fast and agile in the water. It mostly eats small fish, squid and other cephalopods, krill and other crustaceans,