OHIGIX OF MKIRATIOX. 59 



tance in search of ;i place where tliey may conceal their 

 nests. 



Many species of tropical sea hirds resort each year to 

 some rocky islet, situated perhaps in the heart of their 

 range, where they may nest in safety. This is not migra- 

 tion as we understand the word ; but, nevertheless, the 

 object is the same as that which prompts a Plover to 

 travel to the arctic regions ; moreover, the movement is 

 just as regular. These sea birds ])ass their lives in the 

 tropics, their presence or absence in any j^art of their 

 range being largely dependent upon the supply of food. 

 Ihit, as in the case of the Warbler which mio^rates from 

 8uuth America to Labrador, they are annually affected 

 by an impulse which urges them to hasten to a certain 

 place. This impulse is periodic, and in a sense is com- 

 mon to all birds. There is a regular nesting season in 

 the tropics, just as there is a regular nesting season in the 

 arctic regions. 



There is good reason, therefore, for the belief that 

 the necessity of securing a home in which their young 

 could be reared was, as it still is, the cause of migration. 

 It nnist be remembered, however, that birds have been 

 migrating for ages, and that the present conditions are 

 the result of numerous and important climatic changes. 

 Chief among these is doubtless the Glacial period. In- 

 deed, Dr. Allen has stated, and the theory has been gen- 

 erally accepted, that the migration of birds was the out- 

 come of the Glacial period. That their journeys were 

 greatly increased and the habit of migration extended 

 during the ice age is apparently undeniable, but, altluuigh 

 previous to the Glacial })eriod a warm temj)erate climate 

 prevailed nearly to the northern ])ole, there nmst even 

 then have been sufficient difference between winter and 

 sunnner climate to render a certain amount of migration 

 necessary. Furthermore, there is a well-defined migra- 



