Scientific Classification
KINGDOM: Animalia
PHYLUM: Chordata
CLASS: Aves
ORDER: Sphenesciformes
FAMILY: Spheniscidae
GENUS: Eudyptula
SPECIES: E. minor
Conservation Status
Standing only 1 foot tall on average and weighing around 3 to 6 pounds puts them at the smallest end of the penguin spectrum. Compare that to the emperor penguin we are all familiar with which stands 3 feet tall and weighs around 70 pounds!
As their namesake suggests, they have blue coloration on their backside with a white ventral surface. This type of coloration is called countershading so predators from below have a harder time spotting them against the bright sky underwater, and they also are harder to spot from above against the deep blue of the ocean.
After mating, the female lays either one or two and sometimes three white or brown spotted eggs roughly the size of a large goose egg.
The eggs will incubate for about 1 month and hatch. Newly hatched chicks are barely larger than a baby chicken and hidden safely in burrows the parents have built deep underground, within caves, or rock crevices. Both parents will go to sea and return at dusk to feed the chicks.
In about 2 months, the chicks will fledge. Male penguins reach breeding age around 3 while females are a little less at 2 years of age.