This Hummingbird has a Color Trick

A male Brazilian ruby at Itororó.

The ecolodge at Itororó has a number of hummingbird feeders, with about three species visiting regularly when we were there: the white-throated hummingbird, violet-capped woodnymph, and Brazilian ruby. We also got brief looks at the scale-throated hermit and the glittering-bellied emerald. All except the emerald are Atlantic Forest endemics, meaning that this is the only place in the world that they’re found.

The Brazilian ruby is one of a number of hummingbirds that can dazzle you with the way their throat—or gorget, as ornithologists call it—changes color. Take a look below at two images I took of a Brazilian ruby male just a few seconds apart, and you can see what I mean.

Just by moving his head ever so slightly in one direction or another, he can change the intensity of color on that patch of feathers—or make the color patch go away almost completely.

I also shot a quick (6-second) video of a male Brazilian ruby flashing his throat patch:

Most of what I’ve read seems to suggest that male hummingbirds do this trick in order Read more