By Julie

May 14, 2008

Magellanic Penguin

Filed under: Uncategorized, stories — julie @ 3:50 pm

Let’s take a quick trip to the coastlines of Chile and Argentina to learn about yet another species: the Magellanic penguin! The Magellanic likes to nest in burrows in dirt and clay under rocks and bushes on the coastline. They can duck in and hide in these burrows if they get disturbed. These penguins can also bray, moo, and cackle.There are 700,000 pairs of these penguins. They are of stable condition, which means they aren’t vulnerable or endangered. They are excelent long-distance swimmers and catch a lot of krill, squid, and fish to eat. They hunt for their dinner in groups. They lay two eggs, which get equal care and are both likely to hatch. The Magellanic penguin looks a lot like the Humboldt penguin, another member of the temparate climate group. It has a stripe a lot like an upside-down horseshoe across its chest, and a black stripe under its chin. Both stripes are black. When the weather is warm, the feathers around these penguins’ eyes fall off and pink patches form. When the weather starts to get cool again, they grow the feathers back. It’s a little like taking a jacket on and off. The Magellanic is the biggest of all the temparte climate penguin species (Galapagos, Humboldt, and African are the other ones). Can you guess where these penguins got their name? If you guessed something about an explorer, you’re right! Ferdinand Magellan was a famous explorer who circumnavigated the world a long time ago. That means he sailed around the whole world! He discovered these penguins in the year of 1519 on a voyage around the tip of South America. So hurry on over to this marvelous habitat to see these curious penguins just like Magellan did.
NOTE: This nonfiction paragraph I researched and wrote on my own time.

May 13, 2008

Rockhopper Penguins

Filed under: Uncategorized, penguins, stories — julie @ 11:08 am

Our final feathery friend is known as the Rockhopper penguin. Hopping peacefully from rock to rock like they’re rubber balls, early visitors to the Falkland Islands (where these penguins live) called them “Jumping Jacks”! The islands where rockhopper penguins live have the greatest temperature range of any penguin habitat. That means it can be chilly, and you’ll be sweating in a while! Rockhoppers, like all penguins, have snow-white bellies and chests and black backs. This is to camoflauge them from their predators and prey when they’re swimming. From above, their dark backs blend in with the dark waters below. From below, their light bellies blend with the light sky above. They also have spines along their tongues for a reason, to keep food going one way: in! Rockhoppers are the smallest of the crested penguins, sporting firey yellow plumes. In mating season, these penguins shake their head rapidly to create a flurry of crest, almost like a halo! This helps them attract a mate. Chicks gather in créches, or small nursery groups. Rockhoppers also have a very ecstatic vocalization, or a very loud call or cry. Rockhoppers are known for their ability to hop! Rather like a kangaroo, they hop instead of walking. They can scale slopes close to 500 feet in an hour, using about six-inch hops. They take breaks if the slope gets too steep. These determined Jumping Jacks are sure to hop to the top of your favorite animals list!
NOTE: This nonfiction paragraph was written for a school project

Royal Penguins

Filed under: Uncategorized, penguins, stories — julie @ 10:29 am

Here comes another kind of penguin fit for a king: the Royal penguin! Unlike the Emperor and King, they stroll down the red carpets of Macquarie island. This island is halfway between Australia and Antarctica. It is also the sole place that royal penguins live! Most penguins inhabit a few islands, but the royal penguin sticks to Macquarie. They nest in depressions in the ground lined with pebbles or grass. They also pack together in mammoth colonies: ranging from 75 to 500,000 pairs! There were 56 royal penguin colonies counted on Macquarie in 1984. There are 850,000 pairs of royal penguins in total, and they are considered to be a stable species. They are white and black with yellow and black crests. Royals are one of the biggest crested penguins.They also have thick orange bills. They are about as tall as a medium-sized bush, two feet. They weigh 10 to 15 pounds, which is a few pounds heavier than a newborn baby. They look a lot like Macaroni penguins, except for their white chins. It’s understandable that they were once thought to be a Macaroni subspecies, their living spaces even overlap! The shape of a royal penguin’s body helps it to swim at speeds of 20 miles per hour! This probably explains why they spend lots of time at sea. Their speed helps them catch crustaceans, fish, and squid for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Their diet is about half krill and other small crustaceans. 48% is fish, and about 2% squid. Little penguins huddle into a créche for warmth and safety. These kingly and queenly penguins may not live in a palace, but they sure do rule the penguins!
NOTE: This nonfiction paragraph I researched and wrote on my own time.

Snares Island Penguin

Filed under: Uncategorized, penguins, stories — julie @ 9:36 am

The penguin I will tell you about next is the Snares Island, or Snares Crested penguin. Splishing and splashing, braying and bickering, you probably want to go watch up close! Sorry, but Snares Island penguins live on Snares Island, New Zealand. This island is a marine sanctuary, and humans are prohibited. You can catch views of these penguins from boats, though. Snares Island is completely free of introduced land animals! These animals are big threats to many kinds of penguins, so this gives Snares Island penguins a better place to live! Luckily, Snares Island penguins don’t migrate from this wonderful home. These penguins come together in huge rookeries! The rookeries can hold millions of these penguins in just one crowded rookery! They make their nests on forested beaches or high rocky hills. They scrape out a little nest and line it with twigs and branches. When their egg hatches, it stays in a créche with other chicks, waiting for its parents to bring it some fish, squid, and krill. When they grow a little bit older, they hang around and sometimes get in the way at the rookery. These penguins are called “hoodlums”. Snares Island penguins are black and white, like all penguins. They have a thick, heavy orange bill. They also have red eyes. They have bright yellow crests on their heads. They are difficult to tell from other crested penguins, especially while they’re swimming. Unfortunately, these penguins are considered “very vulnerable” because of their low numbers and limited breeding areas. There are only 25,000 pairs! No matter how rare, these Snares Crested penguins are sure to win your heart.
NOTE: This nonfiction paragraph I researched and wrote on my own time.

May 9, 2008

Macaroni Penguins

Filed under: Uncategorized, penguins, stories — julie @ 5:47 am

About our next penguin: when people here the words “macaroni penguin”, they’re likely to think either “You’re kidding!” or “I’m hungry!” These delicious critters even live on South Sandwich Island! These penguins are actually named for hats called “macaroni” hats. They had feathers in them, like the macaroni penguin crests, and were worn by 18th century men called “macaronis”. This is also where the song “Yankee Doodle” came from! Macaroni penguins are the largest crested penguin. They get their orangey-yellow crests as adults. Crests are like little tufts of yellow and orange feathers sticking out of the sides of some types of penguins’ heads. Macaronis look a bit like Royal penguins, but Royals have white chins. Macaronis have white bellies, and backs and heads as black as coal-colored licorice. Macaronis and social, and spend lots of time together. Little baby penguins huddle into crèches, like many other kinds of penguins. Crèches are little little groups or huddles. Lovelace, from the movie Happy Feet, is most likely a macaroni. But these penguins don’t live in the snow with adélies, they live on islands like South Sandwich and South Georgia Island. These penguins breed the furthest south of the crested group, and don’t migrate. There are nearly 12 million pairs of these birds, making them the most abundant penguins on Earth! Macaronis sometimes forge and indulge their meals of fish and squid after dark. To troop around, macaronis hop on both feet. You’ll find these distinguished macaroni penguins to add a formal touch to the world of penguin curiosity.
NOTE: This nonfiction paragraph was written for a school project

May 8, 2008

Fairy Penguins

Filed under: Uncategorized, penguins, stories — julie @ 5:52 pm

You’ll find the fairy penguin, or little blue penguin, making a splash in the sub-Antarctic regions south of Australia, Tasmania, and New Zealand. Living up to their name, these compact penguins are only 16 to 17 inches tall and weigh but two pounds! They are the smallest penguins. Fairy penguins have indigo-blue and slate-gray backs, heads, and flippers. Their bellies and chests are white. They have tiny heads with two pinprick earholes and bigger bodies. Their torpedolike shape helps them swim through the water rapidly. These penguins are excelent swimmers. Their scientific name, Eudyptula, means ‘good little diver’ in Greek! They spend most of the day at sea snagging small fish, miniature squid and octopi, and tiny crustaceans. They forage for food in groups called “rafts”. They return to their nests, burrows or rock crevices lined with plant material, at the end of the day. Did you know that fairy penguins reuse the same nest every year? They usually live for about seven years. They have a population of 500,000 pairs, or 1,000,000 birds! My last interesting fact about these penguins is their wide sound range: they can bark, bleat, bray, cackle, growl, hiss, quack, scream, sneeze, trumpet, and even moo and meow! As you can clearly see, these itsy-bitsy penguins are definently small but mighty!
NOTE: This nonfiction paragraph I researched and wrote on my own time.

Jackass/Blackfoot/African Penguins

Filed under: Uncategorized, penguins, stories — julie @ 4:57 pm

A loud, braying call pierces the air. Å donkey? It could be a jackass penguin! Jackass penguins are penguins of many names. Some call them blackfoot penguins, because of their webbed feet with dark hues. Another name is the jackass penguin, because of their cry similar to a donkey or jackass. Their last name is the African penguin, because they live on islands off the coast of southern Africa. They nest in burrows dug under rocks or the small amount of vegetation. They’re known to munch on tiny fish like sardines, suncord, and anchovies. They also like squid and crustaceans. They can eat a pound of food each day! Blackfoot penguins are of average penguin size, about two feet tall. That is tall enough to peer over the end of the average piano bench. They have light bellies and black backs, flippers, and heads. A white stripe surrounds their cheeks. Pink featherless patches lay above their eyes. A horseshoe-shaped band crosses their chests. They also have black spots on their chests that are unique to every penguin like human fingerprints! African penguins have a population on about 180,000 birds, one of the smallest penguin species! They are recognized as “vulnerable” because of oil spills and habitat loss. Possibly due to this, jackass penguins are some of the least-studied penguin species. Watching this sparse species of penguins dive in and out of the waves searching for a meal would be nothing less than a great pleasure.
NOTE: This nonfiction paragraph I researched and wrote on my own time.

May 7, 2008

The Third-Floor Bedroom (Inspired By Harris Burdick)

Filed under: Uncategorized, stories — julie @ 4:28 pm

I was a plain girl. Limp brown hair framed my face, the color of peachy silly putty, and milk-chocolate eyes. At school and most of the time at home, I was just what I looked, like: ordinary. But if you caught me alone in a room with a piano, I am not modest enough to refrain from saying that you would never want to leave. Music flowed from the piano, domesticated and tamed by my fingertips as I stroked, note by note. As much as I loved the works of Mozart and Bach, I mostly enjoyed writing my own music. I could spend hours on end replaying, putting tidbits of songs together, scribbling notes onto sheet after sheet of blank notepaper. However much I was entranced by the glossy, dark instrument, I lacked one thing: confidence. I would grow up to be a “house mother”, as I called them, or a nurse, or a lawyer. Never would I see my name in a thick book of music, accompanied by beautiful notes. But all of that was about to change. On a pleasant day, I was alone in the house, bound to the piano, testing out scales and chords and scrawling down potential titles on the tops of sheet music. It all began when someone left the windows open. My ears tuned to the melodic flow of the ebony and ivory keys, I did not notice a noise from the third-floor bedroom. After I abandoned my joy to make lunch, I sensed a bit of a fluttering noise from upstairs. Almost as if paper were being blown from the desk. But after a minute, it slowed and ceased. Shrugging it off, I returned to the piano, experimenting with an #A. Just when I had finished the phrase, I heard the doorbell chime, shattering the song. Ding-dong! I stood and hurried to answer the door. When I pulled back the door something amazing happened. Fourteen slender paper birds blew from the gusty tug of the wind onto the hearth. They were the same wallpaper birds which were a design of the wallpaper on the third-floor bedroom. Not even closing the door, I almost didn’t realize that this was irregular. I am guessing I was a bit numb from shock. I walked slowly to the piano and began to play the first scale in the song I had been composing. In a whirlwind I was suspicious didn’t come from outside, the wallpaper birds rose, slower than life, as the song built into climax the birds flew in a flurry around me. Just as I was nearing three-quarters through my song, the sound of the doorbell rang again, accompanied, by a timid knock on the partially-open door. “Martha? Benjamin?” The voice of our next-door neighbor, Mr. Watson, spoke quietly. The birds, who had stopped circling me, flattened against the wall. Mr. Watson’s plump, spectacled face peered inside. “Erica? Was that you playing? You should play in the Town Music Festival, I dare say. You have serious potential, I’m quite impressed! Quite a beautiful composition. Are either of your parents home?” I grinned in spite of myself.

As Mr. Watson wrote out his message, placing it by the corded phone, Erica’s plain face glowed with pleasure.

Yellow-Eyed Penguins

Filed under: Uncategorized, penguins, stories — julie @ 3:50 pm

Our next penguins, the Yellow-eyed Penguins, live up to their name. Their eyes of pale yellow, gleaming like bright topaz gems, will grab your interest right away. These intruiging penguins are the rarest out of all of them! Their population is 1,500 to 2,000 pairs, which is very few next to the macaroni, which probably has around 2,000,000 pairs! They live on the coast of New Zealand and a few more southern islands. They nest in forests! They can be seen residing in little nests resembling shallow bowls, lined with twigs and grasses, like a sparrow or some other flying bird’s nest. However, the yellow-eyed penguins’ nests are on the forest floor where they can reach. These penguins need a lot of personal space: most of the time, nests are spaced out widely to one nest per hectare! This proves that the penguins seek solitude: they are the least socialable of all the penguins and seem to enjoy being out of sight of others except their mates and chicks. Even the little chicks don’t huddle off in créches, or nursery groups, like most penguin types. They like to stick with their parents. If you watch, some people see yellow-eyed penguins scuttle down to the sea to catch food at dawn or dusk! Their diet is 85% fish and 15% squid. They much catch a lot to eat, since they’re such swift swimmers! Another amazing fact about these penguins is that they can live to 20 years old! Yellow-eyed penguins are probably the closest penguins to the “original penguin” in appearance. They have grey-blue backs and white bellies. Their bills are red-purple. They are the third largest penguin, after the emperor and king. They get their name from their stunning yellow eyes. A crown of yellow feathers circles their eyes and wraps around the back of their head. However amazing these penguins are, they are classified as threatened or endangered. Their forests are sometimes chopped down, forcing these brilliant birds to nest in high grasses. Mammals, like dogs, cats, and ferrets that people have brought to the country can harm or eat them there! A Yellow-Eyed Penguin Trust was formed to help save these penguins. Every school in New Zealand got educational resource kits, and with everyone pitching in, the lives of yellow-eyed penguins began to improve. It fills me with joy that if people try hard enough, they can save species! If you can’t believe all of these interesting facts about yellow-eyed penguins, go to New Zealand and spot these birds with their beautiful yellow eyes for yourself!
NOTE: This nonfiction paragraph I researched and wrote on my own time.

May 6, 2008

Galapagos Penguins

Filed under: Uncategorized, penguins, stories — julie @ 7:22 pm

Even though you’ve heard mostly about penguins like the adélie, emperor, and king, it’s not really realistic- most penguins live where it’s warmer or are even beach bums! A good phrase to describe the Galapagos penguin is “soaking up some sun rays”! These penguins live off the coast of Ecuador on the Galapagos Islands, on the Pacific Ocean. The air temperature can get over 100 degrees F, water temperature to 82 degrees F, and the dark feathers on their backs to 124 degrees F! This is 100 degrees (or more) warmer than the frosty Antarctic! Appropriately, Galapagos penguins nest in burrows, underneath plants, and in lava rock crevices. How do these penguins beat the heat, being the penguins living in the hottest climate?! The chilly Cromwell Current offers a refreshing dip, and the penguins spend a whole lot of time making a splash there. You might notice them panting like dogs that just ran like crazy. Humans sweat, but penguins lack sweat glands and lose body heat by panting. They hold their flippers slightly outward to lose more body heat and to keep their feet from getting sunburned! Even so, this type of penguin is officially endangered. There are only 15,000 birds left! This sad truth makes me want to hop a ship to the Galapagos and do something to help! Galapagos penguins are one of the smaller species, the smallest banded penguin. They have white stomachs and blue-black backs and heads. A blue-black band runs across their chests. Their bills are long and thin, like two burnt french fries stuck on top of one another! They are sometimes confused with their look-alike, the Magellanic, but Galapagos penguins are smaller and have thinner belly marks. So don’t take it for granted if you have air-contitioning and fans to keep you cool!
NOTE: This nonfiction paragraph was written for a school project.

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