Many birds do spend their entire lives in one country, and this does not mean just the Flightless Birds such as kiwi, emus, ostriches and rheas. Most parrots spend all their lives in one country: they do not migrate because they tend to live in tropical, sub-tropical and temperate areas. Kookaburras and kingfishers spend their lives in one country. Ground-dwelling birds such as pheasants and lyrebirds stay in one country, while marshland birds such as moorhens and swamphens also stay in one country. There are many species of birds that stay in one country.
An immigrant.
sessile
immobile animal/plant
one direction lives in the UK (United Kingdom)
Spider monkey. Jaguar. Tapir. Snakes. Birds.
The koala lives in Australia.
orangutans live in rain forest in a country that has one : . )
tanzania
This question is too vague. Birds are ubiquitous and live in every continent and, assumedly, every country. In fact, you'd be hard pressed to find a country that doesn't have at least one species of bird.
There really aren't that many birds that live in the Peruvian Colca Canyons. In fact, only one does: the Andean Condor lives in these Peruvian landmarks.
There is no comprehensive directory of cell phone numbers where one can find the number of a person who lives in another country. If one's cell phone number was publicly available one would be deluged by junk calls.
Resident birds stay in one place all year round. Migratory birds fly to different countries at different seasons, e.g. swallows spend the summer in northern Europe but the winter in Africa, and Whooper swans go to Iceland for the summer and come to Britain in the winter.