HUMMERS

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 Although it is possible to see six species of hummingbirds in Chico, the only common one, and the only year-round resident is Anna's Hummingbird. The iridescent red head and throat of the male make it unmistakable. Females and immature birds are hard for the inexperienced bird watcher to tell from other species. That challenge pales in comparison to trying to identify hummingbirds apart in Colombia, which has over 300 species! I haven't been to Colombia, but I have been to Peru, Chile, Argentina, Ecuador, Venezuela, Panama, and Costa Rica, and was nearly overwhelmed by the choices in my field guides.

Hummingbirds are unusual in several ways. Their wings swivel back and forth through the air, similar to our arm movements when treading water, allowing them to hover and fly backwards, nearly unique in the bird world. Their bills have evolved to reach nectar sources of flowers. Tropical hummingbird bills can be curved or straight and even longer than the bird's body! To drink nectar, they don't slurp it through their bill like a straw. The tongue, with many fine projections that absorb the sugar solution, is drawn up into the bill and squeezed out. I mentioned before that, if you feed hummingbirds, a 5:1 sugar solution is fine. Some recommend 4:1 but sugar may crystallize on the bill and cause bill rot and kill the bird, so 5:1 is safer. You can feed them as late in the year as you want; feeding them will not prevent their migration - not all of them migrate out of the Chico area, anyway. Red food coloring is not known to cause any health problems for the birds but there is no need to color the sugar water in your feeder; they will find it anyway, but some red color on the feeder is helpful.

The iridescent color on many hummingbirds is due to a combination of pigments and feather structure. If you watch a mature male as it twists and turns its head, the head will appear bright red one moment, purple the next, and then black. Tiny bubbles inside the feather barbs refract and reflect light in different ways, resulting in iridescence and varying colors.

The territorial behavior and aggressiveness of hummingbirds is well known to anyone who has watched a hummingbird feeder. Why are these little birds so assertive? Simply because, in nature, nectar sources are ephemeral - they are only available for only a few hours in each flower and the bird needs to get to them quickly and ward off competitors. I have a friend and colleague who researches flower blooming and hummingbird territories. In one experiment in Yosemite Park, he and his graduate students unloaded 500 pots of flowers from a truck and placed them in a large plot on the ground. Within five minutes, several hummingbirds were establishing territories around the flowers that were producing nectar!

Finally, the scientific name of the hummingbird order, which includes the swifts, is Apodiformes, which means "without feet", because early observers thought these very aerial birds were unable to perch due to a lack of feet!

 And, as the old story goes, hummingbirds hum because.... they don't know the words! For detailed information on hummingbirds, go to http://www.hummingbirds.net/ .

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Roger Lederer

About Me: Dr. Roger Lederer is a retired professor of Biological Sciences at CSU, Chico who has studied birds for over forty years and in the process has written several dozen research articles, five books, and traveled the world while observing and lecturing about birds.

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This page contains a single entry by Roger Lederer published on December 23, 2009 8:47 AM.

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