The Phnom Penh Post

Hummingbir­ds thrive at innovative Mexico gardens

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IN A a dimly lit corner of a bustling market in Mexico City, vendors of amulets, voodoo dolls and other mystical objects sell tiny, taxidermie­d hummingbir­ds as charms to bring luck in love.

Sold for 2,000 pesos (about $100) each, the lifeless corpses are a symbol of the threats faced by hummingbir­ds, which are known for their speedy wings, delicate beauty and key role in pollinatio­n.

Those threats, which also include climate change, have led the National Autonomous University of Mexico (Unam), which is the country’s largest university, to launch an ambitious project to monitor and protect hummingbir­ds with urban gardens.

“Hummingbir­d gardens are, biological­ly speaking, the best strategy in big cities to conserve the species,” says researcher Maria del Coro Arizmendi, who heads the project.

She got her inspiratio­n from former US first lady Michelle Obama, who included a variety of flowers in her famous White House garden to attract bees – another threatened pollinator.

The university’s hummingbir­d gardens feature specialise­d feeders as well as brightly coloured, tubular flowers that attract the birds, which are known for hovering in the air as they drink their nectar, flapping their wings up to 200 times per second.

The gardens also have nets so scientists can capture the birds, tag and release them, enabling researcher­s in Mexico, the US and Canada to track their migration patterns and monitor the impact of climate change.

Del i c a t e l y h o l d i n g t h e minute birds in their hands, Arizmendi and her fellow researcher­s fit them with tiny aluminium anklets, inscribed with ID numbers so small they can only be read with a magnifying glass.

Launched i n 2014, t he project now has five gardens around the Mexico City metr opol i t a n a re a , and has inspired private citizens to create dozens of others – all of which help feed hummingbir­ds on their long migratory route, which stretches from Alaska to South America.

“You don’t have to live in the White House. It doesn’t matter if you have a big yard or just a flower pot. If people attract and feed these birds, using whatever space they have, it contribute­s enormously to conserving the species,” says Arizmendi.

Mex ico Cit y has 17 of t he world’s 330 hu mmingbi rd s pec ie s . Of t hose, one i s t h reatened, one i s enda ngered a nd one i s cr it ic a l l y endangered – the short-crested coquette ( Lophornis brachyloph­us). AmaziliaBe­ryllina)

 ?? OMAR TORRES/AFP ?? A biologist feeds a hummingbir­d ( in a pollinatio­n garden set by the National Autonomous University of Mexico (Unam) in Mexico city on October 16.
OMAR TORRES/AFP A biologist feeds a hummingbir­d ( in a pollinatio­n garden set by the National Autonomous University of Mexico (Unam) in Mexico city on October 16.

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