Showing posts with label hummingbird. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hummingbird. Show all posts

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Tidbits on Hummingbirds




Hummingbirds can hover because they move their wings in a figure-8 motion, gaining lift from both sides

Aside from insects, they are the only animal that can fly upside down

They wings can move up to a speed of 200 strokes/sec

Hummingbirds enter a state of "torpor" at night - almost shutting down their heat (cut body temperature in half) and metabolic systems to compensate for not eating

Here's a PBS clip, with the link to the entire documentary on hummingbirds as well.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Secret to Hummingbirds Drinking Nectar











A hummingbird can extract nectar by wrapping its tongue into a straw. But how could it since viscosity makes sucking liquid more difficult as the straw becomes smaller?

Research at MIT has discovered that the hummingbird is taking advantage of surface tension - what allows water striders to skim across water. When a hummingbird sticks its tongue into a flower, the tongue compresses from 3/4in long to 1/25in in diameter.

The tongue closes, nectar is drawn up, and the "straw" fills with nectar. The hummingbird then scrapes its tongue clean and swallows. It repeats this process 20x/second during feeding.

The discovery holds promise for researchers building miniature chemistry laboratories — "labs on a chip" — that move tiny droplets of chemicals from place to place.

Here's a video of hummingbirds feeding.