Author Topic: Unintended Consequences  (Read 5032 times)

rcjordan

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Unintended Consequences
« on: December 12, 2023, 02:20:54 PM »
We like hummingbirds. As a bonus, they are easy to feed in the warm months.  But after the big freeze in TX & MX a couple of years ago during the migration season our usual group of 5-6 was almost wiped out. Soooo... knowing next-to-nothing about flower gardens for pollinators I spent a day or two deep-searching, went to local garden shops, and put in a small garden (3m x 4m) with a focus on long & late blooming plants that would catch their eye during the fall migration. (They supposedly remember every feeding spot along their migration path.)  Success! We have a new set that has returned for 2 years now.

UC:  Last winter and again this winter a few are over-wintering here. Screw that 1000-mi flight to MX!  Feeding them  in cold/freezing weather is a PITA.

littleman

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Re: Unintended Consequences
« Reply #1 on: December 12, 2023, 06:36:43 PM »
Very cool!  I'm a big hummingbirds fan too.  Their beautiful and their physics are amazing.  We once had a hummingbirds nest in our back yard, it was very small, about the size of half a chicken egg.  We have some fuchsias our back yard which seem to bloom year round so they are a constant source of food for them,  I am not sure if they would bloom in the winter months in NC, but it may be worth looking into.

ergophobe

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Re: Unintended Consequences
« Reply #2 on: December 20, 2023, 12:36:46 AM »
>>  long & late blooming plants

One of my coolest nature observations that I pieced together on my own was the relationship between alders and other sweet sap trees, sapsuckers and hummingbirds.

Over the course of several days in a fen I watched the red-breasted sapsucker make the tour of its trees. As soon as it left, the hummingbirds would follow and get the leftover sap the bigger bird had missed. So then I went into the library for some researchers

Scientists still don't know how sapsuckers keep the sap flowing. They have tried to make identical holes and they always coagulate. One theory is that their saliva has an anti-coagulant. The upshot is that the sap continues to flow and they will have a set of trees that they visit, letting the sap build up as they go around their circuit.

Hummingbirds know this. If they are feeding and sapsucker shows up, they will clear out to let the sapsucker do its work. If another bird shows up, they will often mob that bird (hummingbirds can be pretty agressive).

The cool thing about this is that the alder or lilac or deerbrush trees that the sapsucker needs are available for a super long season, so as long as the supsucker is there, it means that the hummingbirds can come "early" and not die of starvation and still be there for when the scarlet monkeyflowers or fushcia or other favorites bloom.