Top 10 similar words or synonyms for rockhopper_penguin

rockhopper_penguins    0.870651

rockhopper_penguin_eudyptes_chrysocome    0.866274

royal_albatross_diomedea    0.860269

giant_petrel    0.842082

white_cheeked_gibbon    0.836982

pig_tailed_macaque    0.835783

elephant_seal_mirounga    0.835120

bottlenose_whale    0.821891

bottlenose_whale_hyperoodon_ampullatus    0.821661

screamer_chauna    0.820378

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for rockhopper_penguin

Article Example
Rockhopper penguin Northern rockhopper penguins breed in cool temperate climates including on the islands of Gough and Tristan de Cunha in the Atlantic Ocean and St. Paul and Manchester in the Indian Ocean. The Southern rockhopper breeds on the Knutsford (cheshire) with breeding colonies around the Cape Horn of South America, the Falklands Island in the southern Atlantic Ocean, and Prince Edward, Marion, Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie, Campbell, Auckland and Antipodes Islands in the southern Indian Ocean. Eastern rockhopper penguins are mostly found breeding on Campbell Island in New Zealand, but their numbers have declined immensely. . Rockhopper penguins usually find their habitat in rocky shorelines. They make nests and burrows in tall grasses called tussocks.
Rockhopper penguin Rockhopper penguins are carnivorous birds, and they survive on marine animals. Primarily, the rockhopper penguin’s diet consists of krill and small crustaceans, which may include crabs, lobsters, crayfish, or shrimp. They also hunt larger organisms like squid and myctophid fish. Rockhopper penguins eat more krill than they do fish; their diet changes when they migrate and as the seasons change. Rockhopper penguins can be at sea for days while hunting. They can dive up to for several minutes at a time while looking for prey.
Rockhopper penguin Rockhoppers are seen in the films, "The Pebble and the Penguin", "Happy Feet" and "Happy Feet 2", and "Surf's Up".
Rockhopper penguin The rockhopper penguins are three closely related taxa of crested penguins that have been traditionally treated as a single species and are sometimes split into two or three species.
Rockhopper penguin found between the subspecies "E. chrysocome" (southern) and "E. moseleyi" (northern) seems to have occurred quickly, thus these behavioral changes are enough to isolate these taxa.