Deep Forest Canopy
Species Radar
Gulls, Terns, and Skimmers

Arctic Tern

Sterna paradisaea

The Arctic tern is a tern in the family Laridae. This bird has a circumpolar breeding distribution covering the Arctic and subarctic regions of Europe, Asia, and North America. The species is strongly migratory, seeing two summers each year as it migrates along a convoluted route from its northern breeding grounds to the Antarctic coast for the southern summer and back again about six months later. Recent studies have shown average annual round-trip lengths of about 70,900 km (38,300 nmi) for birds nesting in Iceland and Greenland, and about 48,700 km (26,300 nmi) for birds nesting in the Netherlands, while an individual from the Farne Islands in Northumberland with a light level geolocator tag covered a staggering 96,000 km (52,000 nmi) in ten months from the end of one breeding season to the start of the next. These are by far the longest migrations known in the animal kingdom.

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Select a tracking region above to ping the eBird database and reveal live hotspots for the Arctic Tern.

Low-Light Telephoto Systems

Identifying specific features of the Arctic Tern requires high-contrast magnification. Check out the top-rated 8x42 optics.

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