Calliope hummingbird
Template:Short description Template:Speciesbox The calliope hummingbird (Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell; Selasphorus calliope) is the smallest bird native to the United States and Canada.<ref name= Audubon>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=Allabout/> It has a western breeding range mainly from California to British Columbia, and migrates to the Southwestern United States, Mexico, and Central America for its wintering grounds.<ref name=Audubon/> The calliope hummingbird is the smallest known long-distance bird migrant, completing migrations twice per year of some Template:Cvt.<ref name="adw">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
It was previously considered the only member of the genus Stellula (meaning little star), but research evidence suggests its existing placement in the genus Selasphorus.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The bird was named after the Greek muse Calliope.
DescriptionEdit
The calliope is the smallest breeding bird found in Canada and the United States.<ref name=Audubon/><ref name= Allabout/> An adult calliope hummingbird can measure Template:Convert in length, span Template:Convert across the wings and weigh Template:Convert.<ref name= Allabout>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Calliope hummingbirds have glossy green on the back and crown with white underparts.<ref name=Audubon/> The adult male has wine-red streaks on the gorget, green flanks, and a dark tail.<ref name=Audubon/> When an adult male is competing for territory or females, the dark red feathers of its gorget distend outwards to create a more distinct appearance.<ref name= Allabout/><ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Females and immatures have a pinkish wash on the flanks, dark streaks on the throat and a dark tail with white tips. The only similar birds are the rufous hummingbird and the Allen's hummingbird, but these birds are larger with more distinct and contrasting rufous markings on the tail and flanks, and longer central tail feathers.
Habitat and distributionEdit
The breeding habitat of calliope hummingbird is varied among open shrub habitats and altitudes. Nesting usually occurs at higher altitudes in the Rocky Mountains. Nests have been observed from as low as Template:Convert in Oregon and Washington elevation to the tree line at over Template:Convert.<ref name= Allabout/> In Montana, the minimum elevation observed for breeding is Template:Convert.<ref name=Audubon/><ref name= Allabout/> Open montane forest, mountain meadows, and willow and alder thickets may variously serve as breeding grounds. During migration and winter, they also occur in chaparral, lowland brushy areas, deserts and semi-desert regions. They nest in western North America from southern British Columbia and Alberta south to Colorado and southern California.<ref name=adw/> During winter, they move mainly through Arizona and New Mexico and northern Mexico, to winter in southwestern Mexico.<ref name=adw/>
BehaviorEdit
Calliope hummingbirds are a migratory bird, generally leaving their breeding grounds earlier than most birds (although not as early as the rufous hummingbird) to take advantage of the late-summer wildflowers in the mountains of western North America. They are believed to be the smallest-bodied long distance migrant in the world.<ref name= Allabout/><ref name=adw/>
These birds feed on nectar from flowers using a long extendable tongue, drink sap from holes created by sapsuckers or catch insects on the wing. While collecting nectar, they also assist in plant pollination.<ref name= Audubon/> Plants preferred for pollinating include paintbrush, penstemon, columbine, trumpet gilia, and elephant head. They will also occasionally catch and eat small insects and spiders.<ref name= Allabout/>
Adult males usually arrive on the breeding ground before females, from mid-April to early May. The male claims and vigorously defends a nesting territory in which he will breed with many females. The male takes no part in raising the young and often actually vacates the breeding grounds by the time the young hatch. The female usually builds an open cup nest in a conifer tree under an overhanging branch, though apple and alder trees have also been used. The nest is often built on the base of large pine cones and somewhat resembles a pine cone itself.<ref name= Allabout/> A nest may be used repeatedly over the course of several years. Two eggs are laid from late May to early July and are incubated for 15 to 16 days.<ref name= Audubon/> The young are capable of flight about 20 days after hatching.<ref name= Allabout/>
HummingEdit
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The prominent humming sound of a calliope hummingbird Template:Ndash as for all hummingbirds during flight and hovering Template:Ndash derives from its rapid wingbeats while feeding or interacting with other hummingbirds.<ref name="hightower21">Template:Cite journal</ref> Humming serves as an audible communication to alert other birds of the arrival of a fellow forager or potential mate.<ref name=hightower21/> The humming sound derives from aerodynamic forces generated by both the downstrokes and upstrokes of the rapid wingbeats, producing acoustic oscillations and harmonics.<ref name=hightower21/>
Courtship display and sonationEdit
During courtship, a male calliope hummingbird hovers at accelerated wingbeat frequency up to 95 flaps per second (42% higher than normal hovering), creating a loud buzzing sound, with throat feathers protruding and facing a female.<ref name=Audubon/><ref name=clark/> The male then ascends temporarily to Template:Cvt and dives at high speed, with the rapid descent causing sonation of wing and tail feathers combined with vocalization, intending to attract attention of the female.<ref name="clark">Template:Cite journal</ref> Research in a wind tunnel demonstrated that the male courtship display includes sounds produced by three independent feather or vocal components, each with different acoustic characteristics, thus potentially containing different messages appealing to the female.<ref name=clark/> The tail feathers flutter at high frequency and hit each other to produce the buzzing sound.<ref name="Clark2014">Template:Cite journal</ref> Male calliope hummingbirds also make visual displays to females and nearby males by extending their purple gorget feathers to appear larger.<ref name=adw/>
Temperature regulationEdit
The high metabolic rate of calliope hummingbirds – especially during rapid forward flight and hovering – produces increased body heat that requires specialized mechanisms of temperature regulation for dissipating heat, which becomes an even greater challenge in hot, humid climates.<ref name="powers">Template:Cite journal</ref> As the smallest North American hummingbird species, calliopes appear to adapt their relatively higher surface-to-volume ratio to improve convective cooling from air movement by the wings.<ref name=powers/> When air temperatures rise above Template:Convert, thermal gradients driving heat passively by convective dissipation from around the eyes, shoulders, and feet are reduced or eliminated, requiring heat dissipation mainly by evaporation and exhalation.<ref name=powers/>
All hummingbirds dissipate heat partially by exhaled air, and from body structures with thin or no feather covering, such as around the eyes, shoulders, under the wings (patagia), and feet.<ref name="evang">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="soniak">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> While hovering, calliope hummingbirds do not benefit from the heat loss by air convection during forward flight, except for air movement generated by their rapid wing-beat, possibly aiding convective heat loss from the extended feet.<ref name=powers/><ref name="udvardy">Template:Cite journal</ref>
StatusEdit
As of 2019, calliope hummingbirds have a relatively stable breeding population of about 4.5 million.<ref name= Allabout/> As this species has a restricted wintering range in Mexico and travels an exceptional migratory distance annually of up to 9,000 km, it is on a watchlist for factors that could diminish the population.<ref name= Allabout/><ref name=adw/>
ThreatsEdit
The calliope hummingbird does not have many predators. Its biggest threat is likely long cold spells since they reduce the volume of insects and nectar available in its environment.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The calliope hummingbird may be aggressive in its territory with other hummingbird species and birds, including Gray Flycatchers, American Robins, and Red-tailed Hawks.<ref name=adw/><ref name=":02">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>