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  • The striking colours, akin to royalty, is why this species was named the King Penguin
    0941 19 Jan 2011.JPG
  • A group of king penguins bray and argue amongst themselves during a sand storm on a beach in the Falkland Islands
    8332 14 AL.JPG
  • A rather thin king penguin claps its flippers together.  The movement and sound is one way the penguin communicates with other indivduals
    3177 14 Jan 2011.JPG
  • A king penguin, head raised, captures the early morning sunlight
    1366 20 Jan 2011.JPG
  • 8306 14 AL.jpg
  • King penguins maintain social hierarchies when living close together within a colony
    0986 20 Jan 2011.JPG
  • A king penguin look defiant as it stands guard beside its mate
    1331 20 Jan 2011.JPG
  • A group of king penguins bray and argue amongst themselves during a sand storm on a beach in the Falkland Islands
    8320 14 AL.JPG
  • 8227 14 AL.jpg
  • A king penguin, in the final stages of moulting, nibbles at its flipper
    1368 20 Jan 2011.JPG
  • A king penguin almost completing its first moult.  King chicks only develop the striking colours after the long, brown and hairy down has disappeared
    1362 20 Jan 2011.JPG
  • 8259 14 AL.jpg
  • A king penguin slowly makes it way from the ocean to the breeding colony.  Cabbage weed at the foot of the penguin is a common plant found in the Falkland Island group
    1124 20 AL.JPG
  • King penguins scan the beach front for predators before making their way to the ocean's edge in the Falkland Islands
    8180 11 AL.JPG
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ANASPIDES PHOTOGRAPHY Iain D. Williams

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