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Hummingbird GIF

Gorget Feathers – Allen’s Hummingbird GIF

This hummingbird GIF shows how light on a hummingbird’s gorget can change how we see the color. This Allen’s Hummingbird was guarding his patch of flowers in Southern California.

An Allen's Hummingbird turns his head in this animated GIF. His gorget feathers look dark brown, then bright orange.
Click to see him turn his head

Stretching …

Here’s something a hummingbird does slowly – stretching.

A hummingbird GIF shows an Anna's Hummingbird stretching while high up on a twig
Click to see the stretch

Coming in for a Landing GIF

Below is a series of pictures showing a hummingbird approaching, then landing on a feeder. Just for fun, we put these pictures into an animated hummingbird GIF.

Hummingbird GIF file shows a series of photos of a hummingbird coming to land on a feeder.
Click to see the landing

The photos are of an Anna’s Hummingbird, taken at the Boyce Thompson Arboretum during the spring of 2014. Several other hummingbirds were using the feeder on that day, including males. This bird was a little nervous on its approach, touching down, then backing away, then down.

Filed Under: Hummingbird Life, Hummingbird Pictures Tagged With: Allen's Hummingbird

San Diego Zoo Hummingbird Aviary

The San Diego Zoo Hummingbird Aviary had two striking residents when I visited this past summer. They were male White-necked Jacobin. White-necked Jacobin are definitely not local hummingbirds. They are usually found from southern Mexico, through Central America and into South America.

(NOTE: on my last visit, the two White-necked Jacobin were the only hummingbirds currently in the Aviary. On past visits we have seen different species. If the Aviary is your main reason for visiting the Zoo, please contact the Zoo and ask what is currently in the Aviary.)

The White-necked Jacobin is a hummingbird with dark blue and stark white feathers.
White-necked Jacobin

San Diego Zoo Hummingbird Aviary

The Hummingbird Aviary, also called the Hummingbird House, is small and tucked away. It is near the Discovery Outpost and fairly close to the Zoo entrance. Look for it near the Skyfari (aerial tram) ride.

The arched entrance to the San Diego Zoo Hummingbird Aviary. A painted scene decorated the structure.
San Diego Zoo Hummingbird House

Inside the Hummingbird House

The Hummingbird House is filled with lush plants. There are also feeders. If you go, look for the inverted amber bottles. The White-necked Jacobins would periodically emerge from their perches in the brush to drink from the feeders.

A tangle of lush plants and orange red blossoms grows right up to the walkway in the hummingbird exhibit
Inside the Hummingbird House

Several other tropical and exotic birds were on exhibit during my visit, but the White-necked Jacobin were the only actual hummingbirds. I learned from a docent and a staff member that the San Diego Zoo is currently focusing on exotic hummingbirds rather than local hummingbirds. There were many local hummingbirds on the Zoo and nearby park grounds. (The Desert Sonoran Museum Hummingbird Aviary exhibits hummingbirds found in the United States and Canada.)

Different but familiar

The White-necked Jacobin share the general bill and body shape we see in some of the hummingbirds in the United States and Canada.

The dark blue and white White-necked Jacobin hovers at a feeder tube.
Using the Feeder

The coloring differs from our local hummingbirds. But you’ll find the body language familiar.

A White-necked Jacobin perches on a twig.
Perching

Here it begins to stretch …

The hummingbird has stretched out one wing and fanned its white tail.
Stretching

and finishes.

The hummingbird looks forward with its wing now folded back and its tail closing.

The Hummingbird House is a lovely stop at the San Diego Zoo.

Thanks for coming by. Back to home.

Filed Under: Hummingbird Pictures

Ruby-throated Hummingbird

The Ruby-throated Hummingbird is the most widespread hummingbird in the United States and Canada. If you live east of the Mississippi, you’ve probably seen one … or many.

Male Ruby-throated Hummingbird

PIcture of a male Ruby-throated Hummingbird perched on a twig
Male Ruby-throated Hummingbird

An adult male Ruby-throated Hummingbird has a black head, a red throat (gorget), and a bright green back. This male hummingbird shows the reddish color in his gorget feathers. It was an overcast and rainy day when this photo was taken. There was not enough light to really show off his red gorget.

Here’s the ruby red

Picture of a male Ruby-throated Hummingbird in flight
Male Ruby-throated Hummingbird

This hummingbird’s gorget caught the sunlight as he flew toward me.  It is easiest to see the color when the light is behind you but shining directly onto the hummingbird.

Notice the v-notch or forked tail. Adult male Ruby-throated Hummingbirds have the v-notch tail and pointy tail feathers.

Male Ruby-throated Hummingbird in different light

Side view picture of a male Ruby-throated Hummingbird
His Gorget Looks Dark

This is a different adult male Ruby-throated Hummingbird. His gorget looks dark, almost black. The sun was out, but the angle was not right for the feathers to appear red.

Female Ruby-throated Hummingbird

Picture of a female Ruby-throated Hummingbird among yellow flowers
Female Ruby-throated Hummingbird

A female Ruby-throated Hummingbird has a plain whitish throat, perhaps with some light markings, and a bright green back. It can be tough to tell an adult female from a very young bird after nesting season. The immature Ruby-throateds can look like this. I would be more certain in calling this a female if the photo had been taken in the spring before young hummingbirds were about.

Young male Ruby-throated Hummingbird

Close up side view of a young male Ruby-throated Hummingbird perching among twigs and leaves.
Young Male Ruby-throated Hummingbird

A young male Ruby-throated can have speckling or colored feathers in the throat area. The streaking on this Ruby’s throat, and the stray red feather, show that this is a young male.

Young Ruby-throats in flight

Side view picture of a young Ruby-throated Hummingbird in flight
Young Male?

Guess: young male.  Reason: spotted throat.

Close up of Ruby-throated Hummingbird hovering next to feeder
Young Female?

Guess: none. Reason: light throat, rounded white tail tips made me think it was a young female. But I have another, less clear, photo of the same (maybe) hummingbird shows what might be a single red feather in center of throat.

Name and Nicknames

Ruby-throated Hummingbirds have many dedicated fans. And so, they have many nicknames: ruby throated, ruby throats, rubythroat, ruby, rubies, hummers, hummer birds. Here’s their scientific name: Archilochus colubris.

Ruby-throated Hummers

Ruby-throated Hummingbirds migrate long, long distances between where they nest and where they spend the winter. The Ruby-throated Hummingbirds fly each spring from Mexico and Central America up into Texas, Florida, and rest of the Gulf Coast. They then spread up and through the eastern U.S. and Canada to nest. During their return migration in the fall, they concentrate in large numbers along the Gulf Coast.

We know so much about Ruby-throated Hummingbirds in part due to a few dedicated groups and many interested citizens. Great sources of information on Ruby-throated Hummingbirds are Operation RubyThroat, the HummerBird Study Group, and Hummingbirds.net.

Neighborhood birds
A Ruby-throated Hummingbird peers out from behind a cluster of yellow flowers.
Female Ruby-throated Hummingbird

Ruby-throated Hummingbirds like forest edges, parks, and gardens. Just like we do. The picture above was taken in a public park in Rockport, Texas during the 2014 HummerBird Festival.

If you live in the east, we hope you get some Ruby-throated Hummingbirds at your park, school, or home next season.

Thanks for coming by. Back to home or pictures of other hummingbird species found in the United States and Canada.

Filed Under: Hummingbird Pictures, Hummingbird Species

Calliope Hummingbird

Here is the tiny Calliope Hummingbird.

Picture of a male Calliope Hummingbird with his dark red gorget visible as he perches on a small twig
Calliope Hummingbird

I hoped to see a Calliope Hummingbird all spring and summer but was never in the right area (western mountain areas) at the right time. Finally, they were at Sipe during the fall hummingbird migration, mixed in with the Rufous and Broad-tailed Hummingbirds.

The Calliope Hummingbird is the smallest hummingbird of the United States and Canada.  It is also the smallest bird that nests in the United States. It is very small, between 2.75 and 3.25 inches (7.5 – 8 cm) long, including the beak.  More facts about the Calliope are here.

Male Calliope Hummingbird
Close up picture of a male Calliope Hummingbird as he perches on a feeder
Male Calliope Hummingbird

The male Calliope Hummingbirds have spiky dark red gorget feathers. I only saw a few of them, but they were fairly easy to spot in the middle of the other migrating hummingbirds. I looked for their purplish red gorget, small size, and short tail (tail is about as short as wing tips when the hummingbird is perched).  They slipped in and out of the crowds at the feeders, not calling attention to themselves.

Female Calliope Hummingbird
Close up picture of a female Calliope Hummingbird perching on a feeder
Female Calliope Hummingbird

The female Calliope Hummingbirds were more tricky to identify. Their pale coloring is similar to other female and immature hummingbirds. I looked for a short tail as well as small size. The picture above is a female Calliope, or perhaps an immature Calliope.

Calliope Hummingbirds in the swarm
Picture of a Calliope Hummingbird clinging to a feeder and feeding while other hummingbirds either feed or confront each other.
Calliope Among Other Hummingbirds

The Calliope Hummingbirds were quiet and discreet in this setting. They would feed quietly while other hummingbirds were fighting and chasing. Sometimes the Calliopes would get flushed off the feeders in the general chaos, but the other hummers mostly left them alone. The male Calliopes did notice each other, but I did not see any bother to give chase.

They were very cute.

Picture of a male Calliope Hummingbird on a feeder
Calliope Compared to a US Penny

Thanks for coming by. Check out some of our other picture posts or return home.

Filed Under: Hummingbird Pictures, Hummingbird Species

Rufous Hummingbird

The Rufous Hummingbird is a dashing little hummingbird, bright orange and rust colored.

Picture of a male Rufous Hummingbird with his orange gorget catching the light.

Picture of Rufous Hummingbird male in flight

Rufous Hummingbird – beautiful, small but …

Many people really like the Rufous. Its small size, bright color, and speed are appealing. The Rufous Hummingbird was even named 2014 Bird of the Year by the American Birding Association.

Then there’s the Rufous attitude. The Rufous Hummingbird is known for being “aggressive”. Maybe aggressive seems unlikely, given its small size …

Picture of a male Rufous Hummingbird perched on a feeder. The feeder has a U.S. penny attached to it for size comparison.

but once you have seen a male Rufous Hummingbird … or males … around a feeder, you will understand their reputation.

Video of a Rufous Hummingbird guarding a very large feeder

This male Rufous Hummingbird spent much more time defending that large feeder than drinking from it. This video was recorded at the Cave Creek Research Station near Portal, Arizona in late July 2013.

Competition

Picture of a 2 male Rufous Hummingbirds in flight, with one backing away and one charging toward it

At times, a male Rufous Hummingbird will focus on other Rufous males as they approach a feeder. The males may confront and chase each other rather than feed, while the rest of the hummingbirds look on or continue to drink.

Conflict at the feeders is not constant, however. In this Hummingbird Migration post, you can see that even Rufous males can settle down and tolerate other hummingbirds for a short time.

Female Rufous Hummingbird

Picture of a female Rufous Hummingbird perched on a twig and looking at the camera.

Here is a female Rufous Hummingbird. The females and immature hummingbirds often look alike, so it can be tough to tell them apart. During fall migration, the young hummingbirds are mixed in with the females. It is also challenging to tell them apart from female or immature Broad-tailed Hummingbirds.

Young male Rufous Hummingbird

Picture of a young male Rufous Hummingbird, with a few iridescent orange gorget feathers.

Here is an immature Rufous Hummingbird. This bird had a few scattered gorget feathers coming in, which led to identifying him as a young male. Immature males may also have heavy striping down the throat area, as this hummingbird does.

To identify the female and the young male above, I relied upon multiple photos of each hummingbird, a hummingbird bander’s tip on looking for some white around the orange gorget spot on females (thank you), the Beginner’s Guide to Hummingbirds*, and A Field Guide to Hummingbirds of North America**.

More about Rufous Hummingbirds

Rufous Hummingbird migrate hundreds … or thousands … of miles from their wintering grounds in Mexico (or southern United States) to their summer territories in the United States and Canada.  The males lead the way, arriving in the Pacific Northwest as early as February. Some continue on to Alaska and northwestern Canada. The females follow afterward.

Check out the Spring 2016 Rufous migration map by the Journey North, an educational organization that tracks wildlife movement using citizen observations.

The males leave as early as June or July on their southward migration to their wintering grounds. The females and young follow a little later in the summer.

We have learned a lot about Rufous Hummingbirds from hummingbird banders and citizens, as well as biologists. Their efforts have proven that a population of Rufous overwinters in the southeastern United States, rather traveling to Mexico. Our thanks go out to them.

Name: Selasphorus rufus

Size: 3.5 to 4 inches (9 to 10 cm)

Longest known migration: 3,530 miles

An Aside – Rufous Hummingbird look-alike

The Rufous looks almost identical to the Allen’s Hummingbird, a slightly smaller hummingbird of coastal California and Oregon. How do you tell them apart? We had relied primarily on geographical location (southern and coastal California for Allen’s) and on back color for the males (red for Rufous).

While useful, apparently these shortcuts are not definitive. Telling a Rufous from an Allen’s lies in the shape of the tail feathers. The picture of a male Rufous Hummingbird below shows his red back and a flared tail. That notched tail feather, second from the bottom, is distinctive. That’s a Rufous tail feather.

Picture showing male Rufous Hummingbird's back and flared tail against a green background.

If you are interested in telling Rufous and Allen’s Hummingbirds apart, check out this article by Sheri Williamson for a clear description of color and tail feather shapes and links to photos.

Thanks for coming by.

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Sources for identifying the birds: *Beginner’s Guide to Hummingbirds by Donald and Lillian Stokes and **A Field Guide to Hummingbirds of North America by Sheri Williamson

Sources for “More about Rufous Hummingbirds”: **A Field Guide to Hummingbirds of North America by Sheri Williamson

Filed Under: Hummingbird Pictures, Hummingbird Species

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