When it comes to long-distance migration, birds are the champions. But one species tops the charts: the arctic tern. This small gray seabird makes the longest migration of any animal in the world—traveling up to 60,000 miles during their seasonal journey!
Arctic terns spend summers in the Arctic Circle, the northernmost part of the world. When winter arrives, temperatures drop, and food becomes scarce. To find fish, the birds begin their trek south to Antarctica—at the other end of the globe! But when it’s winter in the South Pole, it’s summer in the North Pole. So in April, the birds begin making their trip back to the Arctic.
“As with almost all birds that migrate, they’re basically trying to spend the year in the places with the best resources,” says Andrew Farnsworth, a biologist who studies bird migration at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.
The average lifespan of an arctic tern is 30 years. Scientists estimate that in its lifetime, a bird will travel as many as 1.8 million miles. That’s equal to nearly four trips to the moon and back! “The distance they travel is just amazing to think about,” says Farnsworth.