Ruby-throated hummingbird
The Ruby-throated hummingbird (Archilochus colubris) is a small, iridescent bird measuring 2.8–3.5 inches (7–9 cm) in length and weighing 0.1–0.2 ounces (2–6 g), notable for its vibrant emerald-green back and crown, gray-white underparts, and, in adult males, a brilliant ruby-red throat that appears black in poor light.[1][2] It is the only species of hummingbird that breeds in eastern North America, where it thrives as a precision-flying jewel of gardens and woodlands, capable of hovering effortlessly while feeding on nectar with wings beating up to 53 times per second.[3][4] This species inhabits a variety of open environments during the breeding season, including deciduous woodlands, forest edges, meadows, orchards, stream borders, and suburban gardens across eastern North America, from the Canadian prairies to Florida and as far west as the Great Plains.[5][2] In winter, it migrates to tropical dry forests, citrus groves, hedgerows, and scrublands ranging from Mexico to Panama, often crossing the Gulf of Mexico in a nonstop flight of up to 500 miles after doubling its body mass with fat reserves.[3][4] Its diet primarily consists of nectar from red or orange tubular flowers such as trumpet creeper and cardinal flower, supplemented by small insects like gnats, mosquitoes, fruit flies, and spiders, which it catches midair or gleans from foliage and spider webs; it may also sip tree sap from sapsucker holes in early spring.[5][2] Behaviorally, the Ruby-throated hummingbird is renowned for its agility, including backward flight and rapid aerial maneuvers, with males aggressively defending nectar sources from intruders, even larger birds, through chases and displays.[4] During courtship, males perform a dramatic U-shaped dive reaching 50 feet high, accompanied by a high-pitched whir from their tail feathers, followed by shuttle flights in front of the female.[5][2] Breeding occurs from April to August, with the female alone constructing a compact cup-shaped nest (about 2 inches in diameter) from plant down, grasses, and spider silk, camouflaged with lichen and typically placed 5–50 feet above ground on a horizontal branch or wire; she lays 1–3 white eggs (usually 2), incubates them for 11–16 days, and feeds the nestlings for 18–22 days until fledging, often raising two or three broods per season.[5][2] With an estimated population of 36 million and no significant downward trends, the Ruby-throated hummingbird is classified as Least Concern by conservation assessments, though it faces potential threats from habitat loss and climate change impacting its flowering resources and migration routes.[2] Among its remarkable adaptations is the highest metabolic rate of any vertebrate, allowing it to consume up to three times its body weight in nectar daily, while entering a torpor state at night to conserve energy by lowering its body temperature and heart rate (which can reach 1,200 beats per minute when active).[4] The oldest recorded individual lived to 9 years and 2 months.[3]Taxonomy
Classification
The ruby-throated hummingbird (Archilochus colubris) belongs to the family Trochilidae within the order Apodiformes, a group characterized by small, agile birds adapted for hovering flight. Its full scientific classification is as follows:| Taxonomic Rank | Classification |
|---|---|
| Kingdom | Animalia |
| Phylum | Chordata |
| Class | Aves |
| Order | Apodiformes |
| Family | Trochilidae |
| Genus | Archilochus |
| Species | A. colubris |