UP IN THE AIR

  Hello ladies and gents this is the Viking telling you that today we are talking about

BLUE CHESTED HUMMING BIRD

Blue-chested Hummingbird - eBird

The Blue-chested Hummingbirds (Polyerata amabilis / Amazilia amabilis) - also known as are Blue-breasted or Beryl-crowned or Lovely Hummingbirds - are Central and South American hummingbirds that occur naturally in Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia and Ecuador; where they occur in subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests and heavily degraded forest.

Some authorities consider the Blue-chested Hummingbird conspecific (one species) with the Charming Hummingbird or Beryl-crowned Hummingbird (Amazilia decora) - as they look very much alike.

SUBSPECIES AND DISTRIBUTION

Found in northeastern Nicaragua to north-central Colombia and Ecuador west of the Andes; possibly also in southeastern Honduras.


NESTING / BREEDING

Hummingbirds are solitary in all aspects of life other than breeding; and the male's only involvement in the reproductive process is the actual mating with the female. They neither live nor migrate in flocks; and there is no pair bond for this species. Males court females by flying in a u-shaped pattern in front of them. He will separate from the female immediately after copulation. One male may mate with several females. In all likelihood, the female will also mate with several males. The males do not participate in choosing the nest location, building the nest or raising the chicks.

The female is responsible for building the cup-shaped nest out of plant fibers woven together and green moss on the outside for camouflage in a protected location in a shrub, bush or tree. She lines the nest with soft plant fibers, animal hair and feather down, and strengthens the structure with spider webbing and other sticky material, giving it an elastic quality to allow it to stretch to double its size as the chicks grow and need more room. The nest is typically found on a low, thin horizontal branch.

The average clutch consists of two white eggs, which she incubates alone, while the male defends his territory and the flowers he feeds on. The young are born blind, immobile and without any down.

The female alone protects and feeds the chicks with regurgitated food (mostly partially-digested insects since nectar is an insufficient source of protein for the growing chicks). The female pushes the food down the chicks' throats with her long bill directly into their stomachs.

As is the case with other hummingbird species, the chicks are brooded only the first week or two, and left alone even on cooler nights after about 12 days - probably due to the small nest size. The chicks leave the nest when they are about 20 days old.

And as always have a chilled day from the Viking.

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