Biology Friday, March 2, 2007 . This is a SciScoop post by David Bradley
Whether birds migrate or not is not just down to whether a species eats insects, fruit, nectar, or candy bars or where you eat them, says team leader Alice Boyle, it matters how reliable that food source is from day-to-day. “Some really long-distance migrants like Arctic Terns are not fruit-eaters,” she points out. She and her colleagues report their findings in detail in the March issue of American Naturalist.
Previously: « Red Peppers Turn Up Heat on Fat Cells
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1 Response to Why Do Birds Suddenly Appear?
DV82XL
March 2nd, 2007 at 6:57 am
<humor> If the researchers had been working up here in Canada, there would have been no doubt in their minds why birds migrate south for the winter.</humor>
Written as we hunker down to ride out a big snow storm.