answersLogoWhite

0

Is the Anna hummingbird endangered

Updated: 4/28/2022
User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

Best Answer

Anna's Hummingbird is not endangered and here are some facts that ive put up. The Anna's Hummingbird is 3.9 to 4.3 inches (10 to 11 centimeters)long. It has a bronze-green back, a pale grey chest and belly, and green flanks. Its bill is long, straight and slender. The adult male has an iridescent crimson-red crown and throat, and a dark, slightly forked tail. Anna's is the only North American hummingbird species with a red crown. Females and juveniles have a green crown, a grey throat with some red markings, a grey chest and belly, and a dark, rounded tail with white tips on the outer feathers.

These birds feed on nectar from flowers using a long extendable tongue. They also consume small insects caught in flight. A documentary that first aired January 10, 2010, shows how Anna's Hummingbirds eat flying insects (at 16:45).[1]They aim for the flying insect, then open their beaks very wide. That technique has a greater success rate than trying to aim the end of a long beak at the insect.

While collecting nectar, they also assist in plant pollination. This species sometimes consumes tree sap.[2]

[edit]Reproduction

Open-woodedor shrubby areas and mountain meadows along the Pacific coast from British Columbia to Arizona make up C. anna's breeding habitat. The female raises the young without the assistance of the male. The female bird builds a large nest in a shrub or tree, or in vines or on wires. The round, 3.8-to-5.1-centimetre (1.5 to 2.0 in) diameter nest is built of very small twigs, lichen and other mosses, and often lined with downy feathers or animal hair. The nest materials are bound together with spider silk or other sticky materials. They are known to nest early as mid-December and as late as June.

Unlike most hummingbirds, the male Anna's Hummingbird sings during courtship. The song is thin and squeaky. During the breeding season, males can be observed performing a remarkable display, called a display dive, on their territories. When a female flies onto a male's territory, he rises up approximately 30 metres (98 ft) before diving over the recipient. As he approaches the bottom of the dive the males reach an average speed of 27 m/s, which is 385 body lengths per second. At the bottom of the dive the male travels 23 metres per second (51 mph), and produces a loud sound described by some as an "explosive squeak" with their outer tail-feathers.[3]

Anna's Hummingbirds will sometimes hybridize with other species, but this is not very common. These natural hybrids have been mistaken for new species. A bird, allegedly collected in Bolaños, Mexico, was described and named Selasphorus floresii (Gould, 1861), or Floresi's Hummingbird. Several more specimens were collected in California over a long period, and the species was considered extremely rare.[4]It was later determined that the specimens were the hybrid offspring of an Anna's Hummingbird and an Allen's Hummingbird.[5]A single bird collected in Santa Barbara, California, was described and named Trochilus violajugulum (Jeffries, 1888), or Violet-throated Hummingbird.[6]It was later determined to be a hybrid between an Anna's Hummingbird and a Black-chinned Hummingbird.[5][7][8]

[edit]Distribution

Anna's Hummingbirds are found along the western coast of North America, from southern Canada to northern Baja California, and inland to southern Arizona. They tend to be permanent residents within their range, and are very territorial. However, birds have been spotted far outside their range in such places as southern Alaska, Saskatchewan, New York, Florida, Louisiana and Newfoundland.[9][10]

Anna's hummingbirds are the only hummingbirds to spend the winter in northern climates; they are able to do this as there are enough winter flowers and food to support them. During cold temperatures, Anna's Hummingbirds gradually gain weight during the day as they convert sugar to fat.[11]In addition, hummingbirds with inadequate stores of body fat or insufficient plumage are able to survive periods of sub-freezing weather by lowering their metabolic rate and entering a state of torpor.[12]

There are an estimated 1.5 million Anna's Hummingbirds. Their population appears to be stable, and they are not considered an endangered species.[13]

[edit]Gallery
  • Female hovering

  • Female Anna's Hummingbird feeding

  • Anna's Hummingbird (adult male)

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Is the Anna hummingbird endangered
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What is an Anna's hummingbird?

An Anna's hummingbird is a species of hummingbird native to western North America, Latin name Calypte anna, named after Anna Massena, the Duchess of Rivoli.


What types of hummingbirds are endangered?

What hummingbirds are endangered is a good question. And the answer is that the Ruby-Throughted hummingbird is an endangered hummingbird and there is a couple of different hummingbirds endangered. So check out more information at www.Nationalgeographics.com


How does a hummingbird gets endangered?

they dont


Are Anna's Hummingbird endangered or threatened?

No. They are among the most adaptable of all hummingbirds and have expanded their range and population even as humans have destroyed the natural habitats they once depended on.


Why is the hummingbird endangered?

They are tiny, thus, easier prey.


Is there any endangered species of hummingbird?

I think so


Is the Hummingbird endangered?

They are tiny, thus, easier prey.


Are Hummingbrds Abundant or Endangered?

It depends on the different hummingbird species.


Does a hummingbird sing?

Some hummingbirds sing, but most do not. Anna's Hummingbird males sing a high squeaky song.


What is the world's smallest bird?

The Bee Humming BirdA Hummingbird. They Are 18cm3 In Size And Eat Nectar.


Is a hummingbird threatened?

No. They are widely spread and seen. Some types of hummingbirds live in smaller ranges but none are endangered.


When did hummingbirds become endangered?

Human civilization and its expansion remains the biggest threat against nature and all wildlife with the destruction of habitat and its primary role in climate change. Housecats are also a primary killer of birds in general.