Penguin by the Anchor Human rarely hunted pengui directly, but slowly starved them to death. Commercial large-scale capture of krill had made pengui to face undernourishment. Businessmen capture them for the rich krill omega-3s! Krill is the basis of the Antarctic food chain, including emperor pengui, Adelie pengui, blue whales, and various albatrosses feed on krill. If there’s no krill at the south Pole, the natural ecosystem will be collapsed and pengui will be the biggest victim! The research team believes that industrial-scale capturing is one of the greatest threats to krill in Antarctic ocean. If commercial practices of krill are not stopped, the number of pengui in the near future may be reduced by 1/3. In fact, we don’t need to grab the pengui’ food because omega-3 is widely found in human daily, such as fish, nuts, seaweed, etc. Do not be deceived by the commercial interests and the gimmicks! Do not buy krill products! It's not your health that you spend money on, but poor and helplessness for the lives of the pengui. The design of this penguin has been completed for some time. When I learned about the crisis facing by the pengui, I hope people pay attention to this matter and reminded by my work! I then designed an ice floe with ancho hanging to clearly undetand that the pengui have been invaded excessively by human. When you print this work and share the printed results, please remember to use your anchored ice floe to tell your friends that pengui in the Antarctic ocean are facing human damage! Thanks SpiderMaker for spooring the creation of this work
Material used: SpiderMaker PLA Matt black, extinction white, orange, warm white, original leather Design Software: SketchUp PRINT UP & CR10 Printing Recommendation Height: 0.2mm Support Type: None Not less than 0.75 and increase the resolution to 0.15mm when dowize printing (ps. Because the accuracy on the printer is not the same. If the assembly parts are too loose or too tight, the parts may be reduced or enlarged to offset the assembly failure caused by the printer's tolerances.)