Cage & Aviary Birds

Hummingbirds can smell their way out of danger

to avoid harmful insects, according to a new study by the University of California, Riverside (UCR) in America. While it is well known that these birds use visual clues to locate flowers when foraging for nectar, little was previously

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Cage & Aviary Birds

Cage & Aviary Birds2 min read
Finch-breeding, Thirties-style
A GOOD deal has been said about bad nesting places, – now let us turn to good ones. Mr Seth-Smith discovered the use of old straw-hats as nesting sites, and they are certainly very good. So also are Hartz cages, and the usual nesting boxes, but if yo
Cage & Aviary Birds3 min read
Deciding When It's Decision Time
IF YOUR exhibition zebra breeding season has gone well and you have a good number of young birds in the flight cages, then you have the luxury of turning your thoughts to selection. Point one: selection should be a gradual process. Young birds can ma
Cage & Aviary Birds1 min read
Another Shade Of Pied
IN EASTERN Europe, probably in the 1970s, a different pied mutation to that described last week appeared, and was given the meaningless name “Californian” by the German fancier A. Münst. This represents a different form of leucism, in which the patte

Related Books & Audiobooks