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Rufous Hummingbird
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A common breeding bird of the Northwest, from northern California to Alaska, the Rufous Hummingbird breeds farther north than any other species of hummingbird in the world. Very aggressive at feeders, it is the western hummingbird most likely to turn up at feeders in the eastern United States. Cool Facts
Description
Sex DifferencesMale with red throat; female throat white with a few red feathers. Male extensively orange on back and body, female with green back and head. Male's tail orange with pointed black tips, female's tail orange, green and black with rounded white tips. MaleGorget (throat) iridescent scarlet. Gorget with elongated feathers projecting slightly to the sides. Top of head dull metallic bronze or bronze-green. Sides of face, sides of chest, flanks, back, and rump plain cinnamon-rufous. Tail feathers pointed, and colored orange with dark tips. Outermost tail feather narrow. Wings dusky. Chest white. Belly and undertail coverts buffy. White spot behind black eye. Legs and feet dusky. Occasional individuals have green on back. FemaleBack metallic bronze-green, head slightly duller. Wings dusky. Outermost three pairs of tail feathers orange at bases, black in the middle, and white on the tips. Middle pair of tail feathers bronze-green, dusky at tips, with orange edges to green base. Next pair out with rufous base, then bronze-green, and black tips. Chin, throat, and chest dull white. Center of throat with variably sized patch of red feathers. Sides and flanks cinnamon-rufous. Undertail coverts pale cinnamon. ImmatureImmature male similar to adult female, but has more rusty coloration in the rump and lower back. Immature female similar to adult, but has less rufous in the tail, the feathers of upper parts and especially the rump have narrow buffy margins, and the throat is variably light and unspotted to spotted or streaked with dark bronze. Similar Species
SoundDoes not sing. Calls buzzy; also sharp chips. Wings of adult male make a high, buzzy trill. »listen to songs of this speciesRangeSummer RangeBreeds from southern Alaska southward to very northern California, south central Idaho, and western Montana. Winter RangeWinters from southern California, through Mexico, and along northern Gulf Coast. Frequent vagrant to eastern states. Habitat
FoodFlower nectar, small insects, and tree sap. Comes to hummingbird feeders. BehaviorForagingHovers at flowers and sap wells (made by sapsuckers), catches insects in flight and plucks them from leaves. ReproductionNest TypeNest an open cup placed in shrub or on small twig or branch of tree, especially conifers. Made of plant down, covered on outside with lichens, moss, or pieces of bark held on with spider web. Reports of colony of up to 20 nests within a few yards of each other. Egg DescriptionWhite. Clutch Size2 eggs.Condition at HatchingHelpless and naked. Conservation StatusDeclining over most of range. Listed on the Audubon Watchlist. Other NamesColibrí roux (French) Sources used to construct this page:Calder, W. A. 1993. Rufous Hummingbird (Selasphorus rufus). In The Birds of North America, No. 53 (A. Poole and F. Gill, eds.). The Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, PA, and The American Ornithologists' Union, Washington, D.C. |
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