Starlings, swifts and house martins also migrate and what a fantastic site it is when they all gather in the autumn to travel to warmer climes.
2007-03-22 07:50:22
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Birds and people are 2 extremely diverse animals. Birds do no longer many times have the excellent factor approximately synthetic heating and air-conditioning. They migrate because of the fact the interior sight circumstances grow to be damaging for them throughout the nice and comfortable summers or chilly winters, or because of the fact of different damaging factors. some (such because of the fact the Arctic Tern, flying some 24,000 miles in step with 3 hundred and sixty 5 days) fly a million/2-way around the Earth in migratory sessions. What a pity they do no longer classify for further Mileage...
2016-10-02 11:36:27
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answer #2
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answered by kopec 3
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Starlings, House Martins.
2007-03-20 12:25:00
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answer #3
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answered by SAR13 3
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Apparently spotted flycatchers, pied flycatchers, wheatears, wood warblers and tree pipits are other British birds but I can't find many town birds that seem to migrate. Link below is where I got this from. Turtle doves seem to be another British bird. However, I'm not sure if we have 'British' birds as such. Do birds recognise boundaries of countries, I wonder? Now there's a question... :)
2007-03-20 12:30:28
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answer #4
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answered by JENNIFER 3
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starlings, house martins, swifts and swallows all migrate. fieldfares also do but they come here for the winter. some seagulls move inland (short of small migration) to breed on the roofs of buildings.
2007-03-21 07:07:11
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Starlings do
2007-03-20 12:32:56
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answer #6
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answered by rose_merrick 7
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