Animals hibernate to conserve energy. When you sleep, you don't use much energy compared to when you are awake, exercising, or doing whatever.
During the winter in polar climates, it becomes colder and harder to find food; a deadly combination. So to balance it out, animals hibernate to conserve energy.
Well I know why they migrate: because they want t go to a place that's warmer
Not all animals either migrate or hibernate. Some just stay where they are and carry on with what they're doing.
Migration is when animals move from one place to another, while hibernation is a dormant state. They are both ways of dealing with changing situations, either go somewhere where the conditions are better or go to sleep until conditions improve. Animals that migrate (birds, deer) are usually much more motile than hibernating animals (hedgehogs, badgers)
As with any snakes, Australian snakes may or may not hibernate, according to the weather. Snakes are cold-blooded, and rely on the heat of the sun to raise their body temperature enough for them to become active. Snakes shelter in rock crevices and logs during cold weather and come out on warm days to sunbake. While they are less active in the cooler months throughout Queensland, the Northern Territory, northern South Australia, Western Australian (except the far southern region) and New South Wales (except for the Alpine areas and High Country), they do not hibernate in these areas. In Tasmania, southern Victoria, the Alpine regions of Victoria and the southern coast of South Australia, snakes do hibernate.
A Basque Shepherd Dog is a breed of herding dog which is bred in the Basque regions of Northern Spain and Southern France.
snow bunting
Yes. Arctic Puffins live at the North pole, along sea coasts, islands in the north Atlantic and the Arctic Ocean.
All the Christmas cards and movies showing penguins frolicing with polar bears are wrong. Penguins are found only in the Southern Hemisphere and polar bears are found only in the Arctic regions of northern Canada and Europe. Five species breed in Antarctica and others live in Australia, Africa, and South America.
Africa can be divided into the following regions: Northern, Eastern, Southern, Western and Central.Africa can be divided into the following regions: Northern, Eastern, Southern, Western and Central.West, Central, Northern, southern
Northern hemisphere polar regions are called the ARCTIC. Southern hemisphere polar regions are called the ANTARCTIC.
southern and northern.
Neither. Not all animals hibernate or migrate. Fish and birds migrate and only a few mammals hibernate in regions with summer and winter.
In the northern and southern polar regions.
They can migrate to different regions. The birds in the Northern hemisphere go south during winter. The birds in the Southern hemisphere go north during winter. They migrate towards the equator.
Overall, southern regions tend to be hotter than northern regions due to their closer proximity to the equator. However, there can be variations based on specific locations and environmental factors.
The southern part of Germany has higher elevations compared to the northern part. The southern regions, such as the Bavarian Alps, have mountains and higher elevations, while the northern regions are generally flatter with lower elevations.
No, seahorses are found in regions where the conditions don't generally require animals to have a quiescent period.
Depends which polar region you are interested in. Different types of animals live in the two polar regions. Polar bears, e.g., live only in the northern polar regions, whilst penguins live only in the southern polar regions. Some animals, e.g. seals, live in both regions.
Almost all Australian animals do not hibernate. Only one species of mammal hibernates, and that is the mountain pygmy possum, which lives in the Snowy Mountains and alpine regions of Australia.
Northern Ontario and Southern Ontario.