no!!!!
Several birds make mountainous regions their home. They include many species of sparrows, eagles, hawks, hummingbirds, and thrashers. There are also owls, quail, and ravens in mountain ranges.
Yes.The Bee hummingbird (smallest hummer),and the Cuban Emerald.Both are native to Cuba.
Fiji is home to the Fiji native hummingbird known as the Fiji flowerpecker (Dicaeum vitiense). While not a true hummingbird, it shares some similar characteristics, such as its small size and nectar-feeding habits. The actual hummingbirds are primarily found in the Americas, but the Fiji flowerpecker plays a vital role in pollination within its ecosystem. Other types of birds in Fiji, such as certain honeyeaters, also exhibit similar behaviors.
catch them wild and bring them to your home
The biome of the hummingbird varies according to the species. They are very adaptable birds, but preferred biomes are woodlands, forests, meadows and grasslands, riparian areas and marshlands, tropical rainforests and jungles, which are all places where the birds can find sufficient nectar and insects on which to feed. However, hummingbirds are also commonly found in urban/suburban areas, and even in deserts and canyons.
the Dixie Hummingbirds
Most of the time a birds nest is camoflaged in a tree or other place where the bird and there young cant be seen!
There really aren't that many birds that live in the Peruvian Colca Canyons. In fact, only one does: the Andean Condor lives in these Peruvian landmarks.
Birds make nests so they can keep their babies safe. Also to have a home to stay away from predators. (which would be carnivores like hawks, voltures or other animals that eat birds.)
The only similarity is that they are both birds. Penguins are flightless, semi-aquatic (being at home in the water and they eat fish. The humming bird is able to fly backwards, forwards and to hover. They also feed on the nectar from flowering plants and the juice from over-ripe fruit.
beavers they eat the food and use it for there home and them birds forgot what there called
Bare cliff ledges or the abandoned nests of other birds. They do not build their own nests.