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      • No, some are permanent residents that have adapted to survive the cold winter months. But most of our birds do migrate, some further than others. While some might only migrate a few hundred miles to escape the worst of winter weather and food shortage, others migrate to use from as far as southern South America and back every year!
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  2. Aug 1, 2021 · Smaller birds tend to migrate in broad fronts across the landscape. Studies using eBird data have revealed that many small birds take different routes in spring and fall , to take advantage of seasonal patterns in weather and food.

  3. Mar 7, 2024 · The new study shows this isn’t an anomaly. Loss and his team analyzed the migratory routes of 150 bird species, from hawks to hummingbirds, that breed in North America. They found that spring green-up was indeed moving earlier across birds’ flight paths, according to satellite observations between 2002 and 2021.

    • Maddie Burakoff
    • Overview
    • Which birds migrate?
    • How do they know where to go?
    • How do they know it’s time to go?
    • Migrating in a changing world

    Some fly 11 days nonstop. Others trek 8,000 miles. Each year, thousands of bird species leave home in search of food.

    Every spring and fall, a spectacle unfolds in the night sky as millions of birds attempt long, perilous journeys between their summer breeding and wintering grounds.

    Most of the thousands of bird species that engage in this annual migration travel at night, when wind currents are smoother and the moon and stars guide their way.

    The birds typically follow established flyways, generally north-south routes that offer the best opportunities for rest and refueling along the way.  Multiple bird species share these flight paths as they contend with rough weather, dehydration, starvation, and the threat of predation. (Read more about the legendary treks of migratory birds.)

    Arctic terns, for instance, undertake pole-to-pole roundtrips spanning more than 60,000 miles—a record, believed to be the world’s longest migration of any animal. Other migrations involve birds flying east-west or up and down mountains. Even flightless birds migrate, such as the Adélie penguin, which makes a nearly 8,000-mile trek through frigid Antarctica.

    Because migration is such an integral part of the avian life cycle, it was likely almost as prevalent thousands of years ago as it is today, says Martin Wikelski, director of the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology and a National Geographic Explorer.

    Roughly half of the world’s nearly 10,000 known bird species migrate, including several songbirds and seabirds, waterfowl and waders, as well as some raptors. The Northern Hemisphere has the most diverse array of migratory birds.

    Among the most well known are Arctic-breeding bar-tailed godwits, champions of endurance. In 2020, scientists recorded a godwit undertaking the longest-known nonstop migratory flight between Alaska and New Zealand, traveling more than 7,500 miles across the Pacific Ocean for 11 days straight. (Learn why birds matter, and are worth protecting.)

    There are also feathered migrants that fly far and fast. The great snipe, for instance, covers distances exceeding 4,200 miles and reaches speeds of up to 60 miles per hour when traveling nonstop between Europe and sub-Saharan Africa, making it the fastest flying migratory bird.

    Even tiny birds embark on gargantuan journeys. Calliope hummingbirds—North America’s smallest bird—make 5,600-mile roundtrips between the high-elevation meadows and open forests of the northern Rockies and the pine-oak forests of Mexico.

    Most species of migratory birds may be partial migrants, meaning that some populations or individuals within the species migrate while others stay put. A fraction of American robins, for example, remain near their breeding grounds across seasons while others travel south and then return north.

    Yellow-eyed juncos breeding at high elevations along southeastern Arizona’s mountains are most likely to migrate up to a mile downslope during severe snowy winters, compared to those at lower elevations facing fewer food constraints. Even tropical birds, especially insectivores, undertake short-distance elevational trips.

    In addition to following celestial cues, such as the position of the sun, stars, and the moon, adult birds use a magnetic compass to navigate. Even when there are no landmarks, this internal “GPS system” can prevent them from getting lost.

    Such navigational acumen can enable individual birds to move through regions not typically traveled. In experiments, when solo-flying common cuckoos were transported nearly 1,500 miles away from their breeding grounds prior to migration, they often steered back to their normal migratory routes.

    But what about inexperienced birds migrating for the first time? In one experiment, geographically displaced young common cuckoos navigated back to roughly the same flight path used by those birds that weren't displaced from their home.  (Read about amazing animal navigators.)

    2:49

    Meet the man who flies with migrating birds

    Whether this navigational capacity is inherited and innate or learned is an ongoing debate. “I think it’s a combination of innate tendency, but you learn from others on the way,” says Wikelski, who has been tracking common cuckoos since 2012.

    For some birds, changes in environmental conditions, such as the length of the day, may trigger migration by stimulating hormones, telling the birds it’s time to fly.

    Birds’ internal biological clocks can also detect when a season shifts, using cues such as changes in light and possibly air temperature.

    Once the birds are in migration mode, a feeding frenzy ensues. This allows the birds to accumulate fat to power their journeys, says Lucy Hawkes, a migration scientist at the U.K.’s University of Exeter who currently tracks Arctic terns.

    “Somehow, [the birds] know that they have to migrate soon and get massive,” Hawkes says.

    Overall, migration schedules seem to be shifting, as a result of climate change. “It looks like bird migrations are commencing a little earlier in the spring,” says Kyle Horton, an aeroecologist at the University of Colorado who uses radar technology to map realtime and historical bird migrations in the United States.

    Black-throated blue warblers, for example, are migrating almost five days earlier now, on average, than they did in the 1960s. Canada-bound American robins are arriving 12 days earlier in the spring than they did in 1994. Migrating whooping cranes are showing up nearly 22 days earlier at their stopover site in Nebraska in the spring and leaving almost 21 days later in the fall than they did in the 1940s. (Learn how climate change has affected the annual migration of the yellow warbler.)

    Such early starts to migration may benefit birds if plant and insect productivity at the breeding grounds mirror the trend. However, not all migratory birds may be able to adapt to a warming world, and if they did, the full costs of doing so remain unclear.

    As scientists continue to unravel the mysteries of bird migration, the phenomenon remains one of nature’s great wonders. 

  4. Do all birds migrate? No, some are permanent residents that have adapted to survive the cold winter months. But most of our birds do migrate, some further than others.

  5. Mar 22, 2017 · But with rapid climate change already under way, the concern is that some migratory birds may not be able to evolve quickly enough to keep up. You can pitch in and help experts keep track of these patterns by plugging your spring-migration sightings into databases like eBird and Audubon’s Hummingbirds at Home .

  6. Apr 19, 2022 · And as millions of birds travel this spring, their feats may seem near impossible to casual observers who contemplate them. But it’s helpful to remember: For the birds, it’s not so remarkable—it’s simply how they’ve evolved to survive. The drive for birds to migrate is at least partially genetic.

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