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.
The arctic tern. Not exactly north pole to south pole but arctic shores to antarctic shores.
The Arctic tern is known to make the longest migration of any animal. It travels about 44,000 miles (71,000 km) from its breeding grounds in the Arctic to its wintering grounds in the Antarctic and back each year, following a zigzag pattern around the globe.
the Arctic tern
Yes, the tiny arctic tern embark on the longest migration trips.
the arctic is not antarctica the arctic is at the north pole and antarctica is at the southNo.Arctic is the North Pole, Antarctic (=anti-arctic) is the South Pole.
the bird is the artic tern migration distance is 14000miles This is slightly wrong as actually the Bar-Tailed Godwit has the longest distance period. This distance is 11,680 kilometers and is said to have never stopped or eaten since its route from Alaska to New Zealand.
Antarctica is at the opposite end of the earth from the Arctic, so, it is the Antipode of the Arctic - ANT-ARCTIC.
The Arctic is opposite Antarctica. Like Antarctica, no country owns the Arctic
Antarctica is a continent, the Arctic is not.
The Arctic Tern holds the record for the longest migration, annually flying from the Arctic to the Antarctic and back. This remarkable bird travels around 44,000 miles each year, taking advantage of the long daylight hours in both polar regions to maximize feeding opportunities.
Artic Tern which travels 40 000 miles a year travelling from Antarctica to the artic for their summers