Birds such as wagtails, brown shrikes, pintails, ruddy shelducks, garganey birds, shovellors, mallards, herring gulls are not seen throughout the year because they have come from some parts of the globe for a certain period of time. These birds are what we called migratory birds. The best place to see such migratory birds are certain wetland or riverine areas. The most striking feature of the migratory birds is that they come in flocks in enormous numbers and often swarmed the areas they visited. Most of the migratory birds in India come from very far off places in the northern part of the globe, such as the palaerctic regions, across the high mountain ranges of the great Himalayas. Majority of the migratory birds coming to India are ducks, geese and cranes. Migratory ducks fly in an enchanting V-formation; maybe they have to save as much energy as they can because they have to travel a long distance during their migration
No. Only some species are migratory.
Not at all. Ducks most certainly fly, even being migratory birds in some parts of the world.
some birds use the weather condition and temperatue to know when to migrate, so if the climate is changing, they can get confused
Blue jays are mostly non migratory..Some Northern birds may withdraw southward in winter.
Several birds have migratory patterns. Birds that take part in long distance migration include swallows, bar-tailed godwits, and garganey ducks. Some birds migrate for short distances, and these include the wall creeper, common chaffinch, and the woodland kingfisher.
Some resident birds in Virginia include Northern Cardinals, Eastern Bluebirds, and Carolina Chickadees. Migratory birds that pass through or winter in Virginia include Ruby-throated Hummingbirds, Yellow Warblers, and White-throated Sparrows.
Some are. Some are not.
There are over 1,300 different species of birds found in India. Some of the different birds include megapodes, pheasants, partridges, ducks, geese, swans, flamingos and storks.
Certain birds, such as hawks and eagles, are known to fly alone as they are solitary hunters. Additionally, some migratory birds, like the common nighthawk, also tend to fly alone during their long-distance journeys.
Some examples of migratory animals include birds (such as swallows, geese, and hummingbirds), mammals (such as wildebeest, caribou, and whales), fish (such as salmon and eels), and insects (such as monarch butterflies and dragonflies). These animals travel long distances between breeding and feeding grounds in response to changing seasons or resource availability.
Primarily migratory waterfowl, some mammals, some birds and Monarch butterflies are some examples of animals that return to the same place every year.