Swallows (house martins, swifts, etc) migrate from the northern hemisphere at the approach of Autumn and Winter, to Africa and warmer climes. They are reputed to return to the same nest site each Spring. By migrating, they ensure that insects are available, and they will nest and rear another brood.
They kind move from place to place when it is winter they move south. And they can move if they chose.
the siksika people when is winter they don't move from the place that they are but they often move because the buffalo herds .
Swallows have evolved as warm weather species, and therefore head to warmer climes in winter. The kestrel can adapt to colder weather easily, but, there is some migration of this falcon in the northernmost part of its range. Birds that nest in Canada move to the U.S.
Most animals move from place to place, but sessile animals stay attached to one spot their entire life.
is it conduction, convection or radiation
Its a definition thing. Gasses don't move more because they're hotter. Gasses that move more are defined to be hotter. Gasses move more when they aquire energy from somewhere and their increased motion is measured with a thermometer. And when the thermometer goes up we say the gas is hotter.
Chinooks had permanent winter houses. In the summer they would travel from place to place to harvest specific things.
Nomads are people who have no fixed residence but move from place to place within the deserts or winter-climated places. They mostly live in marginal areas.
crickets migrate by moving from one place to another in the winter, so they move to where it's warmer.
First, the molecules in a liquid are held together by molecular bonds.. The particles move somewhere between the state of a solid (very rigid and ordered.. no movement) and a gas (no arrangement, spread out, fast moving).. See that liquid particles move and are only locally bound to one another.. The hotter they are, the faster they move.
They stay by their nest and don't move much Or often Stay in one Place and look for food
It moves upward just as hotter air does.