Area of zoo
Enclosure status
Open
Population in the wild
23,800
IUCN status
Vulnerable
Scientific name
Spheniscus humboldti
Order
Sphenisciformes
Type
Birds
Family
Spheniscidae
Region
Chile and Peru
Habitat
Oceans and coastlines

What do penguins look like?

Humboldts are medium-sized penguins. They have black heads with a white stripe on either side and pink skin around their eyes and base of the bill.

Group of Humboldt penguins at London Zoo

Humboldt penguin facts

  • These penguins need to lose heat, rather than conserve it. Bare patches beside their bills and large wings help do this.
  • Humboldt penguins preen themselves and other members of the colony; they gather oil from a gland in their tail and apply it to their feathers like a gel. 
  • Humboldt penguins never chew with their mouth open because they don’t chew at all! Instead our penguins swallow their fish head first.
  • A Humboldt penguin can reach up to 30 miles per hour in the water!
Meet our Head of Birds, Zuzana, as she talks about our colony of Humboldt penguins at the Zoo.

Whipsnade Zoo rockhopper penguins

Two Humboldt penguin chicks in a keepers hands

What do Humboldt penguins eat?

Small fish and crustaceans

Humboldt penguin underwater swimming at London Zoo

Humboldt penguin habitat

At sea, but nests on rocky coasts, burrowing holes in guano and also using scrape nests or caves.

A mum and her toddler enjoy looking at the penguins at London Zoo

Where do Humboldt penguins live?

Coastal Peru and Chile.

Lubetkin penguin pool history

Can penguins fly?

Penguins can't fly, and on land they are known and loved for their clumsy waddles – but when it comes to swimming, they gracefully “fly” through the water.

Penguin wings are actually paddle-like flippers used for swimming. The motion of the flippers resembles the wing movements of flying birds, giving penguins the appearance of flying through water. The wing and breast muscles are well developed, to propel penguins through water - a medium much denser than air.

Humboldt penguin threats

Numbers in the wild are declining. They are at risk from disturbance of colonies by Guano harvesting. Guano (penguin droppings) is a valuable fertiliser and is harvested periodically from many colonies.  They are also threatened by pollution from oil spills, overfishing, and habitat loss. Humboldt penguins are hunted by seals, sealions and sharks.

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