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Spring
2004 Migration of Ruby-throated Hummingbirds
As with most migratory birds,
hummingbirds apparently evolved to their present
forms during the last ice age. They were
(and largely still are) tropical
birds, but as the great ice sheets
retreated from North America, they gradually
expanded their ranges to exploit rich temperate
food resources and nesting space, filling
unoccupied niches in the U.S and southern Canada
while evading intense competition in the tropics.
Some songbird species have adapted completely to
our variable North American climates, in part
by becoming vegetarians in winter, and don't
migrate. But hummingbirds are carnivores (nectar
is just the fuel to power their flycatching
activity), and depend on insects that are not
available in subfreezing weather, so most of them
must migrate to Central America in the
winter or risk starvation. A few Ruby-throated Hummingbirds remain
along the Gulf coast each
winter instead of continuing to Central America,
perhaps because they are too old or sick to make
another trans-Gulf flight or too young (from very
late nests) to have had time to grow fat and
strong enough to migrate; their survival chances
depend on the severity of each particular winter,
and many perish in unusually cold years. Another
small population winters in the Outer Banks of North
Carolina. |

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© 2004 HummZinger
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