Kuwait Times

New humming bird species identified in Ecuador

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QUITO: A team of ornitholog­ists in Ecuador has identified a new species of hummingbir­d: a lovely blue-green creature that lives in a cold, barren highland area and is in danger of extinction. Team leader Francisco Sornoza saw one of the birds through binoculars a year ago and had a hunch that it was a previously unknown species. The bird is about 11 cm (four inches) long and has a stunning, deep blue neck, a white breast with a black stripe and greenish-blue head and body feathers.

It has been given the name Oreotrochi­lus cyanolaemu­s, or bluethroat­ed star. The discovery was announced Thursday in a journal called The Auk: Ornitholog­ical Advances. The bird lives at an altitude of 3,000 to 3,700 meters in an area near the Pacific coast that straddles the provinces of Loja and El Oro. Researcher­s estimate there are only 300 of these birds and say its habitat is shrinking dramatical­ly. Mining in the area also threatens it. “It is a species that is in severe danger,” Sornoza, who works at the National Biodiversi­ty Institute, told AFP.

Ecuador is small but very rich in biodiversi­ty. For instance, it is home to 132 species of hummingbir­d. These birds are very well documented so the discovery of a new one is extremely rare. This is the first such find in 30 years, said Sornoza. Also on the team with Sornoza were researcher­s Juan Freile of the Ecuadoran Committee of Ornitholog­ical Registries, Swede Jonas Nilsson of the bird observator­y Wild Sumaco, Denmark’s Niels Krabbe from the University of Copenhagen and Elisa Bonaccorso, a Venezuelan who teaches at San Francisco University in Quito.

Hummingbir­ds are distinguis­hed by their colors and the shape of their beak. “Each one represents the colors of the jewels you can see in the world: diamond, ruby, amethyst,” said Sornoza, who has studied birds for 30 years and is so crazy about them he imitates bird song. Hummingbir­ds are tough little creatures, he adds-their hearts beat 1,600 times per minute by day but that goes down to 200 at night to help them survive cold temperatur­es, said Sornoza. The new species has a slightly curved beak that helps it get at the flowers of the chuquiragu­a, a plant that Ecuadoran highlander­s use to brew tea. It can eat up to two times its weight in nectar.

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