Migratory birds like Bar-tailed Godwits, Northern Pintails live in the Southern Hemisphere while it is summer. When winter starts, they start flying towards northern hemisphere and spend whole winter here where it is less colder than southern hemisphere.
Penguin
I think a penguin. It is not the penguin. The penguin does not live in the northern hemisphere.
The northern mockingbird, like many southern states.
The main circumpolar constellations, which cannot be seen from the Northern hemisphere are Carina, Centaurus (Centaur) and Crux (Southern Cross). Carina is part of what used to be Argo Navis, a large ship, but has since been divided into three smaller constellations, Carina (the keel), Puppis (the poop deck) and Vela (the sails). Hydra (Snake), Pavo (Peacock), Musca (Fly), Apus (Bird) and Chamaeleon are some smaller ones which might be mainly or exclusively visible in the South. Most of the other constellations can be seen at some time during the year from the Northern hemisphere, although countries far north may not see them.
Yes. Arctic Puffins live at the North pole, along sea coasts, islands in the north Atlantic and the Arctic Ocean.
Petit, dodu, noir, blanc, emplumé could describe a penguin in French. Note that the French word "pingouin" (same origin as the English word) technically applies to the razorbill, (a flying bird living in the northern hemisphere), while the French word "manchot" applies to the English "penguin" (a non-flying bird of the southern hemisphere)
It is a bird. It lives on trees and is widespread in wooded regions of the Northern Hemisphere and sub-Saharan Africa
Wah-waz-zat
Yes, it is a real bird. It can be found in North America. It is a diving bird of northern waters. It is a fish-eating diving bird with a short tail, webbed feet, smooth black-and-white feathers, and a distinctive laughing call. Native to: northern hemisphere.
No. Polaris is only visible in the northern hemisphere, and the Polynesians did most of their navigation in the southern hemisphere, or so close to the equator that Polaris wouldn't be usable.
The term "Southern Hemisphere" refers to the part of Earth which is south of the equator. Some examples of birds found only here include the Black-Backed Gull, the King Cormorant and the Shy Albatross.
Cowbirds in northern states move south. Southern cowbirds don't migrate.