The distance between the North Pole and the South Pole is 12,430 miles. The South Pole is on land and the North Pole is in open water.
The animal's name that you seek may be the Humpback Whale, which migrates from the ice edge in the Southern Ocean to about 77 degrees N in the Arctic, which is a significantly shorter distance than the distance between the poles.
In the winter
Antarctic Circle
You have to beet the champion! I don't no were the champion is though OK!
Skuas do not live in Antarctica, they migrate there to breed on the beaches.
Yes, they migrate short distances.
Humpback whales migrate every year. This is similar to every other whales. They usually migrate to either the Arctic or Antarctic regions for food then migrate to around the equator where they breed.
The Arctic Tern (Sterna paradisaea) does migrate from the arctic to the antarctic. The 24,000 mile round trip is the longest migration of any animal.
Beetles do migrate but the distance they travel depends on which type of beetle they are. Some will migrate and then return to where they came from and others migrate and never come back.
Antarctic sea birds only visit Antarctica's beaches to breed. Otherwise, their location is mysterious and mostly unknown -- except that they make their homes at sea.
There isn't an Antarctic subspecies of Orcas. They migrate all around the world. However, when they are in the antarctic, they don't have any predators as no whale can match to the strength of an Orca.
Depends on the species and the distance.
Beetles do migrate but the distance they travel depends on which type of beetle they are. Some will migrate and then return to where they came from and others migrate and never come back.