Hummingbirds: Marvels of the Bird World
By Stan Tekiela
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About this ebook
- Popular, proven format: replaces Amazing Hummingbirds (9781591932468), which sold more than 25,000 copies
- Market: According to the US Fish and Wildlife Service, about 20% of the population are active bird-watchers, spending more than $40 billion on the hobby, annually
- Highly stylized, beautiful book
- Author routinely attracts more than 100 people to his speaking events and writes a popular column distributed to newspapers in the Midwest and Northeast
- Perhaps nothing generates more positive feedback for the author than the newspaper columns he has been writing for more than 25 years
- Readers have become fans of Tekiela’s style and flair for nature observations and interpretations
- Reader’s experience: simple, concise text complements stunning images that highlight the lives of hummingbirds
- Softcover with flaps—coffee table appeal for less than $20
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Hummingbirds - Stan Tekiela
Amazing hummingbirds
As far back as I can remember, I have loved all birds. However, if I had to come up with a list of my favorites—the fantastic birds that have found their way deep into my heart—hummingbirds would occupy a prominent spot at the top. Their tiny size, giant personalities, amazing colors and mind-boggling ability of flight are just a few characteristics that draw me to hummers as a naturalist and photographer. After more than 30 years of photographing and studying these miniature marvels, here is their incredible story.
Enjoy the Hummingbirds!
Stan Tekiela
female Ruby-throated Hummingbird
The hummingbird family
Biologists who study birds, called ornithologists, group similar birds into families. The hummingbird family, known as Trochilidae, includes more than 350 species. Compared with the other bird families, this one is huge! It is the second largest in size after the flycatcher family, which has around 400 species.
Hummingbirds are New World birds found only in North, Central and South America. These tiny flying jewels were unknown to European science until settlement, and the wide variety of hummers must have mystified the early ornithologists. Even today, it’s not clear why there are so many different species of hummingbirds.
The Trochilidae family is divided into six subfamilies. Hermit hummingbirds belong to the Phaethornithinae subfamily. They live in the tropical lowlands of southern Mexico and range down into South America. Hermit hummers have large down-curved bills and tend to be relatively drab in color.
Tropical hummingbirds are members of the Trochilinae subfamily. The majority of all hummingbirds, including all species in the United States and Canada, belong to this subfamily. With their wide variety of sizes and colors, long or short bills and conspicuous, colorful males, they appear more like what we consider to be typical hummingbirds.
female Black-chinned Hummingbird
None so fair
North American hummingbirds are some of the most easily recognized birds and are characterized by many unique features. These petite treasures are well known for their specialized, brightly colored, sparkly feathers, which refract sunlight almost like a prism. Unlike most other birds, hummers enjoy a distinctive diet of nectar liberally seasoned with minute insects. For sipping their sweet drinks, they sport a long, narrow bill that slips easily into flowers and nectar feeders.
They are very fast, agile flyers and the only birds that truly hover in flight. Many birds can remain stationary, or hover, for a few wing beats if they have a good headwind, but they cannot sustain their hover like a hummingbird. Incredibly, hummers can also fly backward! They are the only birds that can also fly straight up and down, side to side and even flip around in an aerial somersault. The key to all of this fantastic flight is their size and weight.
female Ruby-throated Hummingbird
A good name
Some birds have misleading names. Red-bellied Woodpeckers, for example, don’t have a noticeable red belly. They have just a slight red blush that is easily missed unless you are nearby and viewing the bird from underneath.
Few birds are as well named as the hummingbird. Just listen for the humming sound you’ll hear as they fly by and you will understand the reason for the distinctive name. The sound, however, is not made with the vocal chords. It’s actually created by the wings, which flap incredibly fast. Hummer wings move so much air so quickly that audible reverberation is produced.
A Ruby-throated Hummingbird flaps its wings 70–80 times per second during regular flight. The extraordinary speed of the wing beats makes it difficult to photograph a hummer in flight, freezing it in time. This image shows flight movement captured in less than a hundred-thousandth of a second. During specialized courtship flights, a Ruby-throat will flap up to a tremendous 200 times per second! Try doing anything 200 times in less than 60 seconds and you’ll agree that these birds are beyond amazing.
Broad-billed Hummingbird
Origins of the species
The scientific view of the origin of hummingbirds is murky at best. Because only a few