Databac

Animal Migration.

Publié le 06/12/2021

Extrait du document

Ci-dessous un extrait traitant le sujet : Animal Migration.. Ce document contient 787 mots. Pour le télécharger en entier, envoyez-nous un de vos documents grâce à notre système d’échange gratuit de ressources numériques ou achetez-le pour la modique somme d’un euro symbolique. Cette aide totalement rédigée en format pdf sera utile aux lycéens ou étudiants ayant un devoir à réaliser ou une leçon à approfondir en : Echange
Animal Migration.
Have you ever heard loud honking calls and looked up to see geese flying in a V-formation? The
geese are getting ready for a long trip, or they may be on their way already. Geese are among
the animals that travel south for the winter. In spring, they return to their summer homes in the
north. Their journeys are known as migrations.
Why do animals migrate? In most cases, they migrate to have the best possible living conditions
all year-round. Geese, like other migrating birds, travel south to have a ready food supply. The
grass they feed on becomes scarce during the northern winter. But in summer it's plentiful
again, and they return north to mate, lay eggs, and hatch baby geese.

MIGRATING BIRDS
Geese aren't the only birds that migrate. Arctic terns make one of the longest journeys of all. These
seabirds spend the summer in the Arctic, where there are plenty of small fish to eat. The birds lay eggs
and rear their young here. As winter approaches, the birds fly south. They fly all the way to the
Antarctic, where it's summer and they can find plenty of fish. Their round-trip journey takes them about
six months, three months each way! It's about 20,000 miles (35,000 kilometers) long. Many kinds of
ducks, hawks, songbirds, and other birds also migrate.

BATS AND BUTTERFLIES
Other flying creatures besides birds migrate, too. Some kinds of bats migrate. Monarch butterflies make
amazing journeys.
Each autumn, millions of monarch butterflies in North America migrate. Monarchs from west of the Rocky
Mountains fly to California. Monarchs east of the Rockies fly to Mexico. The butterflies' journeys may
take a month. During and after the long flight, the butterflies gather together. Thousands of monarch
butterflies cover the trees in these gathering places.
Most adult monarchs migrate south only once. The females lay their eggs and then die. The young
butterflies make the return trip back north in the spring.

CARIBOU AND WILDEBEEST
Some large mammals migrate, too. Caribou, a kind of deer, live in northern Canada in summer. They
feed on grass on Arctic plains. In the fall, the caribou gather in large herds and migrate to forests farther
south in Canada. The herds move slowly, stopping along the way. But they may travel long distances,
sometimes more than 1,900 miles (5,000 kilometers) in a year.
Large African antelopes called wildebeest migrate long distances during dry seasons, when rainfall stops.
The wildebeest migrate in search of water to drink and fresh grass to feed on. A herd of migrating
wildebeest may have as many as 1 million animals.

SEA JOURNEYS
Long migrations are also common in the sea. Humpback whales spend the summer in the icy waters of
the Arctic and Antarctic. There, they find plenty of shrimp-like krill. Krill are the main food of these
whales. In winter, the whales travel toward the equator to give birth in warmer waters. By the time the
whales return to their summer home, their young are big enough to make the journey.
Gray whales summer in icy waters off the coast of Alaska. In fall they migrate to warmer waters near
Mexico, where they breed.
Salmon are born in streams and rivers, where they spend their first two or three years. Then they
migrate to the sea. When they are ready to breed, the salmon journey back upriver. They find the
stream they were born in. Here, they lay eggs and die.
Green turtles also migrate to lay their eggs. Some kinds migrate long distances. They swim across the
Atlantic Ocean from South America to lay their eggs on Ascension Island. It's a distance of about 1,300
miles (2,000 kilometers). After the eggs are laid, the adult turtles return to Brazil's coastal waters. They
leave their young to hatch on the beach and find their way to the sea. Two years later, the young turtles
swim back to the beach of their birth to lay their own eggs.

FINDING THEIR WAY

No one understands exactly how migrating animals know when to migrate or how they find their way.
Some experts think that the shortening days in fall or the lengthening days in spring may act as a signal
to birds and other animals. Such signals indicate that it is time to start their long journey.
Once on their way, birds are thought to navigate by the Sun and stars. Research shows that birds also
may be sensitive to Earth's magnetic field--the space around Earth where a magnetic force is felt. Fish
and turtles may find their way back to their breeding grounds by remembering the smell of the water.
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓

Liens utiles