Aptenodytes

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Aptenodytes
Temporal range: Pliocene to recent
Emperor penguin.jpg
Emperor penguins
Scientific classification
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Aptenodytes

Miller,JF, 1778
Species

Aptenodytes patagonicus
Aptenodytes forsteri
Aptenodytes ridgeni (fossil)

File:Aptenodytes.png

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The genus Aptenodytes (from the Ancient Greek a/α 'without' pteno-/πτηνο- "feather" or "wing" and dytes/δυτης "diver")[1] contains two extant species of penguins collectively known as "the great penguins".[2]

Taxonomy

Ridgen's penguin (Aptenodytes ridgeni) is an extinct species known from fossil bones of Early or Late Pliocene age.

Combined morphological and molecular data [3] have shown the genus Aptenodytes to be basal to all other living penguins, that is, the genus split off from a branch which led to all other species. DNA evidence suggests this split occurred around 40 million years ago.[4] This had been foreshadowed by an attempt to classify penguins by their behaviour, which also predicted the genus' basal nature.[5]

Species

Two monotypic species extant:[6]

Aptenodytes
Common and binomial names[6] Image Description Range
Emperor penguin
(Aptenodytes forsteri)
Emperor Penguin Manchot empereur.jpg
122 cm (4 ft) tall, weighing 22–37 kg (48.5–82 lb), the adult has deep black dorsal feathers, covering the head, chin, throat, back, dorsal part of the flippers, and tail. The underparts of the wings and belly are white, becoming pale yellow in the upper breast, ear patches are bright yellow. The upper mandible is black, and the lower mandible can be pink, orange or lilac. Males and females are similar in size and colouration. Circumpolar distribution in the Antarctic between the 66° and 77° S. It almost always breeds on stable pack ice near the coast and up to 18 km (11 mi) offshore.[7]
King penguin
(Aptenodytes patagonicus)
Penguins Edinburgh Zoo 2004 SMC.jpg
90 cm (3 ft) tall, weighing 11 to 16 kg (24 to 35 lb), The upperparts are steel blue-grey, darkening to black on the head, the belly is white fading to orange on the upper breast with bright orange ear patches. The black bill is long and slender, and curved downwards. The lower mandible bears a striking pink or orange-coloured mandibular plate Breeds on the subantarctic islands between 45° and 55° S at the northern reaches of Antarctica, as well as Tierra del Fuego, the Falkland Islands, and other temperate islands of the region.

References

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External links