Hummingbird Roundup
Passport to Texas from Texas Parks and Wildlife
Until recently, I did not know hummingbirds ate insects.
Well, if you think about it, an animal that’s swinging it’s arms at 72 times a second, needs something to rebuild those muscles that it’s exercising in there. And, without protein, they’re not going to build muscle.
So, if you find insects, such as bees, snacking at your hummingbird feeder, Mark Klym says, don’t panic.
People get all excited when bees get around their hummingbird feeder. And, bees are a great food for hummingbirds. I’ve watched them take bees out of the air.
Klym coordinates the Texas Hummingbird Roundup, a citizen science project where folks like you help biologists take stock of hummers.
We ask people to have a look out in the backyard once a week, about fifteen, twenty minutes a week, and give us a count of what birds [hummingbirds] you’re seeing out there. How many? What Species? What are they using? And then, if you see anything unusual—you find a nest, you see mating behavior—we ask you to record it and let us know about it. Once a year we have these forms sent back in and right now we’re reviewing the data from the 2007 season.
Download an information packet about the roundup, and find out where you can purchase a hummingbird identification wheel at passporttotexas.org.
That’s our show… For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.