No. Some birds do not migrate at all, but live in the same range all year long. This is especially true in warmer climates, but some birds even stay in the Arctic all year. Some birds that migrate move in other directions, such as east or west, or from higher elevations to lower elevations, to get to where they can find food or shelter in the winter. And or course, in the Southern Hemisphere, most birds fly north in the winter.
For food. It has nothing to do with the temperature. If the water and land is frozen, they cannot eat.
kingfisher
No. Only some species are migratory.
When birds fly South for the winter it is called migration.
The main reason that birds fly south in the winter is because they can't stay in a cold place so they fly south to a warmer place during the winter.
Monarch Butterflies. They fly south for the winter like birds do.
When birds fly south for winter each year, this is known as "migration." The birds fly south to live in a warmer climate, and in the spring they fly north again when the weather changes.
60%
Migration
migration
migration
It's warm
They don't stay when it is snowing. Hasn't anybody learned that birds fly south in the winter?
They go to the south or the north its called migration its when animals move from one place to another if that place gets to cold.