African Penguin vs Snares Penguin
Spheniscus demersus verglichen mit Eudyptes robustus
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Merkmal | African Penguin | Snares Penguin |
|---|---|---|
| Wissenschaftlicher Name | Spheniscus demersus | Eudyptes robustus |
| Ordnung | Sphenisciformes | Sphenisciformes |
| Familie | Spheniscidae | Spheniscidae |
| Erhaltungsstatus | Endangered | Vulnerable |
| Länge | 60,0 cm (23.6 in) | — |
| Flügelspannweite | 42,0 cm (16.5 in) | 19,6 cm (7.7 in) |
| Gewicht | 3100,0 g (109.35 oz) | 3191,6666666666665 g (112.58 oz) |
| Ernährung | Small schooling fish, especially sardines and anchovies. Forages within 40 km of the colony, diving … | -- |
| Gelegegröße | 2 | 2 |
| Population Trend | — | — |
Size Comparison
Habitat Comparison
African Penguin
Rocky coastlines and offshore islands of southern Africa. Nests in burrows, under boulders, or in surface scrapes.
Song & Call Comparison
African Penguin
A loud, donkey-like braying 'waaah-waaah' — hence its nickname 'jackass penguin'. Also gives softer grunts and contact calls at the colony. Highly vocal on breeding beaches.
Snares Penguin
Geographic Range & Migration
African Penguin
Coastal southwestern Africa from Namibia to Port Elizabeth, South Africa. The only penguin species breeding in Africa.
Snares Penguin
Erhaltungsstatus
African Penguin
Snares Penguin
How to Tell Them Apart
African Penguin
Black upperparts and white underparts with a distinctive black horseshoe-shaped band across the breast. Pink patches of bare skin above the eyes help with thermoregulation.
Sturdy, pointed, black bill with a grey band near the tip
Snares Penguin
About These Birds
African Penguin
The African penguin is the only penguin species native to the African continent, also called the jackass penguin for its donkey-like braying call. Their population has plummeted over 95% since pre-industrial times due to egg collection, oil spills, and competition with commercial fisheries for sardine and anchovy stocks.
Snares Penguin
Snares Penguin, 50–63 cm, breeds only on the Snares Islands, a tiny New Zealand sub-Antarctic archipelago. Bold yellow crest meeting above bill, pink facial skin, red-pink bill. Piscivore and krill feeder. Vulnerable; limited to a single island group making it inherently at risk from any catastrophe.