yes
All over the US. But usually they come from Canada.
Not at all; moose inhabit northern North America, including some of the US states in the "snow belt" as well as most of Canada.
Not Canada, we don't want you here.
Monarchs as i heard migrate from Canada then travel all the way to the gulf of Mexico.while monarchs are traveling,they stop and have at least 2 or 3 generations of life.With this the monarchs die and the new generation takes it's place and does the same.
common everywhere in northern and mid us and southeastern Canada. uncommon in southwest and mid Canada and rare in southern us and northern Canada.
Monarch butterflies and gray whales are two animals that migrate back and forth from Mexico to the US. Monarch butterflies travel to Mexico to escape the cold winter temperatures, while gray whales move to warmer waters for breeding.
Canada
Canada is.
Canada Geese usually migrate between the U.S and Canada. Their migratory season varies depending on the subspecies and the circumstances happening in their respective environment. Some migrate starting in November while other migrate in the middle of December. But as humans create more artificial habitat and the fact that a lot of them have grown used to eating garbage, many geese no longer migrate at all. In fact a lot of Canada geese in Toronto do not migrate as they subsist quite largely on the garbage people throw throughout the four winter months and return to their standard diet on grasses during the early spring.
Mexico, Michoacan
Monarch butterflies have been introduced to Australia and New Zealand and Hawaii. They appear occasionally on the east side of the Atlantic, thought to be transported across the ocean. Species outside of the US do not appear to migrate. A few subspecies have been identified in the US that do not migrate. That vast majority of Monarchs (hundreds of millions) migrate to a forest outside of Mexico City each winter.
Canada