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・ March of the Dinosaurs
・ March of the Dinosaurs (disambiguation)
・ March of the Eagles
・ March of the Falsettos
・ March of the Infidels
・ March of the Iron Will
・ March of the Living
・ March of the Lonely
・ March of the Machines
・ March of the Malvinas
・ March of the Martyrs
・ March of the Meanies
・ March of the Nordgau
・ March of the Norse
・ March of the One Hundred Thousand
March of the Penguins
・ March of the Pigs
・ March of the prostitutes
・ March of the Saint
・ March of the Siamese Children
・ March of the Slunks
・ March of the Soviet Tankmen
・ March of the Tadpoles
・ March of the Volunteers
・ March of the Zapotec/Holland EP
・ March of Treviso
・ March of Turin
・ March of Tuscany
・ March of Ukrainian Nationalists
・ March of Verona


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March of the Penguins : ウィキペディア英語版
March of the Penguins

''March of the Penguins'' (French ''La Marche de l'empereur'' ; (:lamaʁʃ dəlɑ̃ˈpʁœʁ)) is a 2005 French nature documentary film directed and co-written by Luc Jacquet, and co-produced by Bonne Pioche and the National Geographic Society. The documentary depicts the yearly journey of the emperor penguins of Antarctica. In autumn, all the penguins of breeding age (five years old and over) leave the ocean, their normal habitat, to walk inland to their ancestral breeding grounds. There, the penguins participate in a courtship that, if successful, results in the hatching of a chick. For the chick to survive, both parents must make multiple arduous journeys between the ocean and the breeding grounds over the ensuing months.
It took one year for the two isolated cinematographers Laurent Chalet and Jérôme Maison to shoot the documentary, which was shot around the French scientific base of Dumont d'Urville in Adélie Land.
The documentary won the 2005 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.
==Subject matter==
The emperor penguins use a particular spot as their breeding ground because it is on ice that is solid year round and there is no danger of the ice becoming too soft to support the colony. At the end of Antarctic summer, the breeding ground is only a few hundred meters away from the open water where the penguins can feed. However, by the end of winter, the breeding ground is over away from the nearest open water. In order to reach it, all the penguins of breeding age must traverse this great distance.
The penguins practice serial monogamy within each breeding season. The female lays a single egg, and the co-operation of the parents is needed if the chick is to survive. After the female lays the egg, she transfers it to the feet of the waiting male with minimal exposure to the elements, as the intense cold could kill the developing embryo. The male tends to the egg when the female returns to the sea, now even farther away, both in order to feed herself and to obtain extra food for feeding her chick when she returns. She has not eaten in two months and by the time she leaves the hatching area, she will have lost a third of her body weight.
For an additional two months, the males huddle together for warmth, and incubate their eggs. They endure temperatures approaching , and their only source of water is snow that falls on the breeding ground. When the chicks hatch, the males have only a small meal to feed them, and if the female does not return, they must abandon their chick and return to the sea to feed themselves. By the time they return, they have lost half their weight and have not eaten for four months. The chicks are also at risk from predatory birds such as northern giant petrels.〔This bird is unidentified in the documentary itself, but the Region 2 DVD identifies it.(Antarctic Skua )〕
The mother penguins come back and feed their young, while the male penguins go all the way back to sea (70 miles) to feed themselves. This gives the mothers time to feed their young ones and bond with them. Unfortunately, a fierce storm arrives and some of the chicks perish.
The death of a chick is tragic, but it does allow the parents to return to the sea to feed for the rest of the breeding season. When a mother penguin loses its young in a fierce storm, it sometimes attempts to steal another mother's chick. At times, the young are abandoned by one parent, and they must rely on the return of the other parent, who can recognize the chick only from its unique call. Many parents die on the trip, killed by exhaustion or by predators (such as the leopard seal), dooming their chicks back at the breeding ground.
The ingenious fight against starvation is a recurring theme throughout the documentary. In one scene, near-starving chicks are shown taking sustenance out of their father's throat-sacs, 11th-hour nourishment in the form of a milky, protein-rich substance secreted from a sac in the father's throat to feed their chicks in the event that circumstances require.
The parents must then tend to the chick for an additional four months, shuttling back and forth to the sea in order to provide food for their young. As spring progresses, the trip gets progressively easier as the ice melts and the distance to the sea decreases, until finally the parents can leave the chicks to fend for themselves.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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