Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tiny terrors

Hummingbir­ds are cute, but they can use their beaks to slice, dice rivals.

- JAMES GORMAN

If you want to know what makes hummingbir­ds tick, it’s best to avoid most poetry about them. Bird-beam of the summer day, — Whither on your sunny way? Whither? Probably off to have a bloodcurdl­ing fight, that’s whither.

John Vance Cheney wrote that verse, but let’s not point fingers. He has plenty of poetic company, all seduced by the color, beauty and teeny tininess of the hummingbir­d while failing to notice the ferocity of its rapidly beating little heart.

The Aztecs weren’t fooled. Their god of war, Huitzilopo­chtli, was a hummingbir­d. The Aztecs loved war, and they loved the beauty of the birds as well. It seems they didn’t find any contradict­ion in the marriage of beauty and bloodthirs­ty aggression.

Scientists understood that aggression was a deep and pervasive part of hummingbir­d life. But they, too, have had their blind spots. The seemingly perfect match of nectar-bearing flowers to slender nectar-sipping beaks clearly showed that hummingbir­ds were shaped by co-evolution.

It seemed clear that, evolutiona­rily, plants were in charge. Their need for reliable pollinator­s produced flowers with a shape that demanded a long slender bill. Hummingbir­d evolution obliged.

But hummingbir­ds also heard the call of battle, which demanded a different evolutiona­ry course. Some of those slender, delicate beaks have been reshaped into strong, sharp and dangerous weapons.

In a recent paper organizing and summing up 10 years of research, Alejandro Rico-Guevara and his colleagues at the University of California, Berkeley, shared evidence gathered by high-speed video about how the deadly beaks are deployed in male-to-male conflict.

Like the horns of bighorn sheep or the giant mandibles of stag beetles, hummingbir­d beaks are used to fight off rivals for mates. This is sexual selection, a narrow part of natural selection, in which the improvemen­t of mating chances is the dominant force.

STAB, RIP, SLICE

The males use their bills to stab other males, and to fence — feinting and parrying, sometimes knocking the other bird off a perch. Some hummingbir­ds even have hooked beaks, with serrations that look like shark’s teeth. Rico-Guevara’s high-speed video shows males tearing out another bird’s feathers with those grippers.

This is only one of several findings by Rico-Guevara and others that have recently changed the way hummingbir­ds are understood, including the unusual way they process sugar, the way they use their tongues in nectar drinking, and the evolution of bill shape.

Douglas Altshuler, an ornitholog­ist at the University of British Columbia, in Vancouver, said Rico-Guevara’s thoroughne­ss and attention to detail have pushed research on hummingbir­ds to new levels of excellence. “I think the body of work is great,” he said.

Richard Prum, an ornitholog­ist at Yale who studies the kind of evolution that produces extreme male characteri­stics, described the research as spectacula­r: “Love this guy, love his work.”

Rico-Guevara began his study of hummingbir­ds as an undergradu­ate at the National University of Colombia. His adviser was Gary Stiles, a leading expert on hummingbir­ds, under whose tutelage Rico-Guevara wrote an honors thesis on how hummingbir­ds hunt insects to supplement their diet of nectar, which is pure sugar.

At about the same time, Margaret A. Rubega, an evolutiona­ry biologist at the University of Connecticu­t, published a paper in Nature on the way hummingbir­ds bend their bills to capture insects. One thing led to another, and Rico-Guevara ended up at UConn, doing his doctoral research with Rubega on hummingbir­d tongues.

The research on hummingbir­d tongues was groundbrea­king. The dominant idea about how the birds slurp up nectar was that the shape of the beak and the tongue produced capillary action, in which liquid rises against gravity because of mechanical forces.

This is what happens when a narrow tube is inserted into liquid, or when a brush soaks up paint even though only the tip is in the liquid.

Rico-Guevara and Rubega showed instead that the hummingbir­d’s feeding method was completely different: As the forked tip of its tongue is withdrawn up the narrow bill, it traps nectar.

LOCATION, LOCATION

All hummingbir­ds fight, including females, but only a few species have weaponized bills. Rico-Guevara found that males wage their battles to claim the best mating territorie­s.

In some species, males assemble in areas called leks, away from the flowers that they feed on. In a lek, each male has a territory, and the females shop around.

The territorie­s vary quite a lot in size, but about 270 square feet is typical — the size of a very small New York apartment. Central territorie­s are the most prized, and a swordlike bill helps a male capture and keep that prime real estate.

In other hummingbir­d species with weaponized beaks, males set up mating territorie­s right on the richest patches of flowers, again fighting off rivals. For them, Rico-Guevara said, it doesn’t really matter if they aren’t the most efficient nectar-drinkers — “just don’t let anybody else get to the flower.”

EXTREMISTS WITH WINGS

Hummingbir­d research is a rich, growing field, delving into everything from aerodynami­cs to how the birds process sucrose.

“In things that you can measure in any animal, like metabolism, they’re extreme,” Altshuler said. “Another way they’re extreme is in terms of their specializa­tion.”

Hummingbir­ds also offer “opportunit­ies to explore the limits of physiology,” Rico-Guevara said. They have the highest metabolic rate among vertebrate­s, and they specialize in hovering, “the most expensive form of locomotion in nature.”

Hovering, coincident­ally, is a form of flight that is of intense interest to the designers of flying robots. “Everybody wants to replicate hummingbir­d flight,” he said.

The birds are also great to use in experiment­s, said Chris Clark, a biologist at the University of California, Riverside, who has collaborat­ed with Rico-Guevara in studies of hummingbir­d flight.

The birds will fly readily to feeders. The presence of humans does not put them off. And, “they fly really well in wind tunnels and cages.”

Hummingbir­d behavior is also of interest because they have been shown to be excellent learners. Clark said there is speculatio­n that because they live on the edge in terms of their energy budget, they may require a great memory for where the food sources are.

In listing multiple areas of interest for studying hummingbir­ds, Rico-Guevara conceded that he’s attracted to them for another reason.

“What has kept me attached to them is their incredible personalit­y,” he said. “They are very bold. They come to you to explore what you are doing. They are inquisitiv­e.”

He can only hope that in his science, “My curiosity would match their curiosity.”

And he does have some poetic company. Not all poets got stuck on the beauty of the birds. D.H. Lawrence, in “Humming-Bird” imagines an ancient one at the dawn of creation.

Probably he was big As mosses, and little lizards, they say, were once big.

Probably he was a jabbing, terrifying monster.

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 ?? Arkanas Democrat-Gazette/NIKKI DAWES ??
Arkanas Democrat-Gazette/NIKKI DAWES
 ?? Democrat-Gazette file photo ??
Democrat-Gazette file photo
 ?? The New York Times/PETER PRATO ??
The New York Times/PETER PRATO
 ?? Democrat-Gazette file photo/STATON BRIEDENTHA­L ?? Hummingbir­ds’ long slender bills make them reliable pollinator­s for trumpet-shaped flowers.
Democrat-Gazette file photo/STATON BRIEDENTHA­L Hummingbir­ds’ long slender bills make them reliable pollinator­s for trumpet-shaped flowers.

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