Following the seasonal movements of animals was one of the ways we marked the changing of the seasons where I grew up. Even though we tend to think about birds when we hear the word migration, many different types of animals migrate, including insects, fish, and mammals. While many animals fly these annual treks, others must walk or swim to reach their destinations. The books on this list highlight the wonders of migration in all its forms.
First, let's begin with general books about migration and animals other than birds.
First, let's begin with general books about migration and animals other than birds.
- Animals on the Move by Allan Fowler - This Rookie Read-About-Science selection presents the migration of salmon, whales, zebras, caribou and many different types of birds for the youngest readers.
- The Journey: Stories of Migration by Cynthia Rylant - This book provides readers with a series of narratives relating the migratory habits of the American silver eel, the Arctic tern, the blue whale, the caribou, the desert locust and the monarch butterfly.
- Seymour Simon, a prolific and extraordinary writer of science books, has three titles that should be in any collection about migration. They are:
- Animals Migrating: How, When, Where and Why Animals Migrate by Etta Kaner - Realistic drawings accompanied by engaging text provide an introduction to migratory animals and the patterns they follow. Included here are Arctic terns, gray whales, lemmings, army ants and more.
- Home at Last: A Song of Migration by April Pulley Sayre - This book describes nine different animals and their migration patterns.
- Do Lobsters Leap Waterfalls? A Book About Animal Migration by Laura Purdie Salas - In question and answer format, this book looks at where migrating animals go when the weather changes.
- Being Caribou: Five Months on Foot with a Caribou Herd by Karsten Heuer - This book documents the trip of a wildlife biologist and his wife who travelled on foot with a herd of caribou across the tundra to the shores of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, where the calves were born.
- Hurry and the Monarch by Antoine Flatharta - A migrating butterfly meets a tortoise in Texas and teaches him about the Monarch's life cycle and long migration.
- Wings of Light: The Migration of the Yellow Butterfly by Stephen Swinburne - This book, complete with map, describes the one way trip some yellow butterflies make from the Yucatán rain forest to the northern states in the eastern United States.
- Moon of the Monarch Butterflies by Jean Craighead George - One of the books in the 13 moons series, this title describes a female Monarch butterfly’s solitary flight from Arkansas to Michigan as she lays the eggs that will hatch and repeat her life cycle.
- Marcelo, the Bat/Marcelo, el Murciélago by Laura Navarro Juan Sebastián - This bilingual storybook tells the story of Marcelo, a little bat who is confused about his family's winter migration from the U.S. to Mexico.
- Adelina's Whales by Richard Sobol - As gray whales migrate down the Pacific Coast to their winter home, many end up off the coast of Baja, California. This lovely photoessay follows Adelina and others in her small Baja fishing village as they see and hear the returning whales, first from the shore and then from small boats.
- Adventures of Riley--Survival of the Salmon by Amanda Lumry - Two adventurers, Riley and Alice, visit Southeast Alaska in order to solve a puzzling salmon migration mystery.
- The Magic School Bus Goes Upstream: A Book About Salmon Migration by Joanna Cole - Though I'm not particularly fond of the books written specifically for the television series, this one does a nice job of introducing salmon migration.
- Flute's Journey: The Life of a Wood Thrush by Lynne Cherry - In this fictional account, readers learn about the first year of a wood thrush's life, from its hatching in a forest in Maryland to its migration across the Gulf of Mexico to the Costa Rican rain forest and back again.
- How Do Birds Find Their Way? by Roma Gans - This entry in the Let's Read-and-Find-Out Science series describes what ornithologists know about migration patterns and presents some of their theories about how birds know when to fly and their different means of navigation.
- Red Knot: A Shorebird's Incredible Journey by Nancy Carol Willis - This amazing book follows the migration of a red knot shore bird as she makes her way north, beginning in Tierra del Fuego at the tip of South America, continuing through Brazil, along Delaware Bay and St. James Bay, and ending at the bird's arctic nesting grounds in Canada's Northwest Territories. A detailed map is included.
- Welcome, Brown Bird by Mary Lyn Ray - In this story, two boys living in different countries share a common desire to protect the small brown wood thrush that migrates between their homes each year.
- Flight of the Golden Plover: The Amazing Migration Between Hawaii and Alaska by Debbie S. Miller - Learn about the animals of Hawaii and Alaska as the transoceanic trek of the Pacific Golden Plover is described. This one is accompanied by beautiful, realistic watercolors.
- The Flight of the Snow Geese by Deborah King - This book follows a group of snow geese from their breeding grounds in the far north to New Mexico. The text is poetic and would make a terrific read aloud.
- The Far-Flung Adventures of Homer the Hummer by Cynthia Furlong Reynolds - This fictional account of the migration of a ruby-throated hummingbird describes Homer's flight from the Costa Rican cloud forest to the eastern United States.
- Migration by Georgia Heard, in Creatures of Earth, Sea, and Sky.
- Canada Goose by Marilyn Singer, in Turtle in July.
- The Monarch Butterfly by Douglas Florian, in insectlopedia.
- In the winter, we say good-bye
to the feathered compasses in the sky.
- Did I tell you?
I should tell you
Going home
We're going home
Are you coming?
- He is a monarch.
He is a king.
He flies great migrations.
Past nations he wings.
Thanks for including *Do Lobsters Leap Waterfalls? A Book About Animal Migration* on your list! This was part of a set of 6 silly Q&A books I wrote about animal characteristics, and it was really fun to do. Hopefully, it's fun to read, too. Kids love being right and correcting the adult reader!
ReplyDeleteThanks,
Laura
Hi Laura,
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for writing! I love the books in this series. They are silly, fun and interesting. My son and I have been reading them and he loves them!
Best,
Tricia
Thank you for posting this information!! I will use this as a reference for a 4th-5th grade class called "Migrations." Our class raised and tagged Monarch butterflies and we are going to transition to geography next but I love having something to read aloud while they color or do hands-on projects.
ReplyDeleteThank you for posting this information!! I will use this as a reference for a 4th-5th grade class called "Migrations." Our class raised and tagged Monarch butterflies and we are going to transition to geography next but I love having something to read aloud while they color or do hands-on projects.
ReplyDelete