Animal Migration

A free interactive lesson on animal migration for Class 5 — why animals travel thousands of kilometres each year, how the Arctic Tern makes a 90,000 km round trip, and how birds navigate using the stars and Earth's magnetic field. Based on NCERT Class 5 Super Senses. Includes quiz.

Class 5 ScienceClass 5 / Grade 5Ages 7–10
Lesson
🐦 Animal Migration
Animals travel thousands of miles — every year.🐦Arctic Tern90,000 km🐋Humpback Whale16,000 km🦋Monarch Butterfly4,500 km🐮Wildebeest2,500 kmMigration = seasonal movement between two homes.

Every year, billions of animals make astonishing journeys. The Arctic Tern flies ninety thousand kilometres — from the Arctic to Antarctica and back. Humpback whales cross entire oceans. Monarch butterflies navigate from Canada to Mexico without ever having made the trip before. This seasonal movement is called migration.

Why do animals migrate?

Migration is the seasonal movement of animals from one habitat to another. Animals migrate to follow food, avoid harsh weather, and find suitable breeding grounds. Unlike humans who adapt their environment to survive winter, most animals either hibernate or travel to warmer places where food is available.

The Arctic Tern — the greatest journey

The Arctic Tern holds the record for the longest migration of any animal. It breeds in the Arctic during summer, then flies all the way to Antarctica for the Southern Hemisphere's summer — and back. The round trip covers approximately 90,000 kilometres per year. Over a lifespan of 30 years, one bird may travel the equivalent of three trips to the Moon and back.

The advantage: the Arctic Tern experiences two summers per year and therefore more daylight and food than almost any other creature on Earth.

How do animals navigate?

Animals use several navigation systems — often in combination:

  • Stars — many birds navigate by the night sky, recognising star patterns and using the North Star as a fixed reference point.
  • Earth's magnetic field — birds, fish, and sea turtles have magnetite crystals in their brains that act like a compass, detecting the Earth's magnetic field lines.
  • The Sun — animals with an internal clock use the sun's position at different times of day to determine direction.
  • Smell — salmon are famous for returning to the exact river where they were born using their sense of smell. Each river has a unique chemical signature they memorised as juveniles.
  • Landmarks — coastal and river migrants recognise coastlines, mountain ranges, and river systems.

Other remarkable migrations

  • Monarch butterflies — travel up to 4,500 km from Canada to Mexico each autumn. Individual butterflies have never made the journey before, yet navigate to specific trees.
  • Humpback whales — migrate up to 8,000 km between feeding grounds in cold polar waters and breeding grounds in warm tropical seas.
  • Wildebeest — over 1.5 million wildebeest travel in a circular route of about 3,000 km through the Serengeti and Masai Mara following the rains and fresh grass.

Frequently asked questions

What is migration?

Migration is the regular, seasonal movement of animals from one place to another — usually to find food, escape harsh weather, or breed. It happens in a predictable pattern every year.

How far does the Arctic Tern migrate?

The Arctic Tern travels approximately 90,000 km per year — from the Arctic to Antarctica and back. Over its 30-year lifespan, it covers the equivalent of three trips to the Moon and back.

How do birds navigate during migration?

Birds use a combination of navigation tools: the night sky (star patterns), Earth's magnetic field (detected by magnetite crystals in their brain), the Sun's position, landmarks, and even smell.

How do salmon find their home river?

Salmon memorise the unique chemical signature (smell) of their birth river as juveniles. When they mature in the ocean, they swim back upstream using their sense of smell to find the exact river and even spawning area where they hatched.

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