These heartwarming pictures show male penguins picking up shiny pebbles which they will use to impress potential mates.
As the mating seasons gets underway, the birds at Edinburgh Zoo have started building nests.
Staff have set up special nest rings, while the gentoos have been picking through a mound of smooth stones to find the perfect one to woo their mate with.
Dawn Nicoll, their senior keeper, said: “Penguin breeding season is one of our busiest times here at Edinburgh Zoo and one of the most exciting.
“After placing the nests and pebbles in Penguins Rock, it is fantastic to watch the gentoos pick out their favourite stone, find their mate and choose a nest together.
“It is quite common for gentoos to return to the same nest they have used year after year.”
Penguins typically court the same mate each breeding season but, contrary to popular belief, not all penguins mate for life.
Same-sex penguin partnerships are not uncommon and they tend to make great parents.
And keepers will redistribute eggs from nests which have too many and give them to same-sex partnered penguins to rear.
The first eggs should start to appear in April, with the first chicks hatching in May after a 33 to 35-day incubation period.
The penguin parents share the incubation and parenting duties and, when the chicks reach three to four months of age, they are old enough to leave the nest and join a large crèche with the other penguin chicks.
Whilst in the crèche the young penguins will learn essential skills such as how to swim and feed.