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World Penguin Day: 6 places you’d never have thought you could see them

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p>Imagine a penguin, and you probably picture a pure-white snowscape in a David Attenborough programme, the birds huddled together to withstand the polar chill.

In reality, there are 18 species of penguin, and only two are truly native to Antarctica. The rest are spread through the climates and continents of the southern hemisphere, even reaching up into the tropics.

To celebrate World Penguin Day, here are a few of the more unexpected places our flightless friends can turn up…

1. Australia

Little penguins (Alamy/PA)

Purely by reputation, the scorching temperatures and dust-covered deserts of Australia should make an unhappy home for penguins, but there are snow-capped mountains in Victoria, and penguins on the southern coast. Little penguins, barely bigger than a bowling pin, inhabit beaches near Sydney and Melbourne.

Across the Tasman Sea, New Zealand also has its fair share of penguins, including the ultra-rare fjordland crested penguin, and the yellow-eyed penguin – a faintly evil-looking bird that earns its name with a vivid yellow glare.

2. The Galapagos Islands

Galapagos penguins (Alamy/PA)

Giant tortoises, marine iguanas… penguins? It speaks volumes for the Galapagos Islands’ biodiversity that tropical penguins aren’t what the archipelago is famous for.  Endemic to the Galapagos Islands, Galapagos penguins are among the world’s smallest, standing at around just 50 centimetres high.

The Galapagos Islands straggle the equator, and there are penguin colonies on Isabela Island that just about live in the Northern Hemisphere – the only penguins in the world to do so.

3. Namibia

Boulders Beach (Alamy/PA)

The sparsely-populated African nation of Namibia is famed for its coastal desert – in which towering dunes lead directly into the ocean – but 24 colonies of African penguins breed down the country’s Atlantic coast, while vagrants have been spotted as far north as the Congo.

The only species of penguin to breed on the African continent, these small birds also frequent South Africa’s shores, where they are hunted by leopards, mongooses and feral cats. For tourists, African penguin HQ is Boulders Beach – a stretch of sand near Cape Town that would look at home in the Caribbean, were it not for its carpet of squawking penguins.

4. The Ballestas Islands

You don’t have to travel all the way to the Galapagos to find South American penguins, and the continent hosts colonies of Humboldt penguins as far north as Peru.

The land of llamas and Machu Picchu, Peru’s penguins are confined to the Ballestas Islands just off the Paracas Peninsula, and rub shoulders with pelicans, cormorants, dolphins and sea lions.

5. The Falkland Islands

A Gentoo penguin (Alamy/PA)

If you know one thing about the wildlife of the Falkland Islands it’s probably that the archipelago contains an absurd number of sheep. At roughly 153 sheep per person, the islands comfortably put Wales and New Zealand to shame, and a sheep even features on their flag and crest.

But the British Overseas Territory should be just as proud of its five penguin species: Rockhopper, King, Magellanic, Macaroni, and Gentoo. The last of these is more numerous on the Falklands than anywhere else on Earth, making the archipelago a global penguin capital.

6. Patagonia

Magellanic penguins (Alamy/PA)

Known mostly for sweeping grasslands, jagged mountain ridges, and rapidly vanishing glaciers, Patagonia’s coasts are often overlooked.

In fact this region at the southernmost tip of South America, shared by Argentina and Chile, boasts record-breaking numbers of penguins, with Punta Tombo hosting the largest Magellanic penguin colony in the world – 210,000 breeding pairs strong.

The Chilean island of Chiloe is the only place on Earth where Humboldt and Magellanic penguins breed together cheek-by-wing, while Magellanic, Gentoo, King, and Rockhopper penguins call the Tierra del Fuego region their home.

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