Robins are common garden birds in Ireland. Anywhere where there are trees or bushes they can be found.
There are several birds that migrate in the fall. Geese, ducks, cardinals, crows, finches, wrens, bluebirds, and robins are just a few birds that migrate.
The Eurasian Robin does not migrate. Many other birds are also called Robins.
Not a I know of. They're resident birds. The robins in northern states move to more southerly locations in winter. Birds from states in the northeast move down to the mid Atlantic states.
Robins in the northern states migrate hundreds of miles.Robins do not migrate in southern states.In these southern areas,robins may be very numerous in winter,as the influx of northern birds add to the local population.
No, not all birds migrate. The American Cardinal, for example, does not migrate. It mostly depends on your location, for what birds do and do not migrate.
Robins found in southern states do not migrate at all. Only robins from the northern states do. In the south, robin populations balloon as northern birds arrive.
Robins are considered migratory everywhere, hence the latin or scientific name Turdus migratorius.
Sing Lay Blue Eggs Migrate Catch worms
Sing Lay Blue Eggs Migrate Catch worms
In the American robin, birds from northern climes migrate to southern states. Birds in the south only withdraw in the coldest winters. That is why wintering robin flocks are so huge in the Carolinas and other states in the south, numbering in the thousands.
Ireland didn't, it is still where it was. Some Irish people did