<h2 id="c2">THE ANNA’S HUMMINGBIRD. <br/><span class="small">(<i>Calypte anna.</i>)</span></h2>
<p>Buffon, writing of the Hummingbird,
and his words do not refer to any
single species, but to them as a group,
says that “the emerald, the ruby and the
topaz glitter in its garb, which is never
soiled with the dust of earth, for, leading
an aerial life, it rarely touches the
turf, even for an instant. Always in the
air, flying from flower to flower, it shares
their freshness and their splendor, lives
on their nectar, and only inhabits those
climates in which they are unceasingly
renewed.”</p>
<p>Of all the birds that might receive the
appellation, “The Bird of America,” to
none could it be applied more truthfully
than to the Hummingbird. For of all
the families of birds that are distinctively
peculiar to the Americas the Trochilidæ,
or the Hummingbird family, contains
the larger number of species. There are
over five hundred species inhabiting
North and South America and the adjacent
islands, from Patagonia on the
South to Alaska on the North. The species
is more numerous in the tropics and
but seventeen are known to frequent the
United States. Of these only one, the
ruby-throated hummingbird, exhibits
its beauty east of the Mississippi River,
and but seven species have their breeding
range chiefly or entirely within the
United States.</p>
<p>“They abound most in mountainous
countries, where the configuration of the
surface and productions of the soil are
most diversified within small areas. Their
center of abundance is among the Northern
Andes, between the parallels of ten
degrees north and south of the equator,
from which region they gradually diminish
in numbers both to the northward
and southward, but much more rapidly
toward the extensive lowlands of the
eastern portion of the continent.”</p>
<p>A very interesting group, not so gem-like
as many of their sister species, is the
hermit hummers represented by a number
of species that chiefly inhabit Brazil.
These hummingbirds are notable for
their plain colors, their plumage having
but little of the lustrous metallic iridescence
which is so marked a characteristic
of the species with which we are more
familiar and which frequent flowers in
the bright sunshine. The laws of Nature
seem to provide against excess even in
coloration. The hermit hummers obtain
their food only from the insect world,
feeding upon those species found on
the leaves of trees in deep forests. In
such a home a gorgeous dress would be
out of place and needless.</p>
<p>Regarding their actions, Mr. Robert
Ridgway says: “Hummingbirds are so
distinct from other birds in their external
structures and manner of flight that
they present in every respect, except
when at rest, an appearance entirely peculiar
to themselves. They spend perhaps
the greater part of their time upon the
wing, usually hovering or balancing
themselves before a flower from which
they are procuring their sustenance of
honey or of minute insects. At such time
the body is nearly vertical or inclined at
a slight angle, the head bent nearly at
right angles with the axis of the body,
the wings spread nearly at right angles
with the same axis.” The motion of the
wings, which is always rapid, may carry
the bird in a horizontal direction or poise
it in its vertical attitude directly over a
flower. In this latter position the motion
of the wings is so rapid that a mere haze
appears on each side of the bird’s body.
Mr. Gould, speaking of their flight, says
“The bird does not usually glide through
the air with the quick, darting flight of a
swallow or swift, but continues tremulously
moving its wings while passing
from flower to flower, or when taking a
more distant flight over a high tree or
across a river.”</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/img1031.jpg" alt="" width-obs="500" height-obs="508" /> <p class="caption">ANNA’S HUMMINGBIRD. <br/>(Calypte anna.) <br/>Life-size.
<br/><span class="small">FROM COL. CHI. ACAD. SCIENCES.</span></p>
</div>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</div>
<p>Such a dainty dress as that worn by
most of the hummingbirds deserves
constant attention. Appreciating this
these little lovers of sunshine are very
fond of preening their beautiful feathers.
While thus engaged they usually perch
on a bare or dead twig in an exposed position.
Truly fortunate is he who is afforded
the opportunity of watching a
hummingbird at this time. In this position
various and graceful attitudes are
assumed and the colors of the plumage
are most beautifully exhibited. Mr. Audubon
tells us that when perching the
hummingbirds “move sidewise in prettily
measured steps, frequently opening
and closing their wings, pluming, stroking
and arranging the whole of their apparel
with neatness and activity.”</p>
<p>Hummingbirds are very aggressive
and show no fear, especially when defending
their nests. They will furiously
attack any bird or other animal that excites
their enmity. They have been known
to follow and annoy hawks and other
birds much larger than themselves.</p>
<p>Mr. Ridgway says: “In their disposition
hummingbirds are not only very
tame but highly curious or inquisitive,
and exhibit a special propensity to closely
inspect a human intruder to their domain.”
This characteristic may be frequently
noticed in the actions of our
common ruby-throat. In spite of the fact
that the hummingbirds are easily tamed
and may even be induced to take food
from the hand or from a flower so held as
to attract their attention, they do not
survive confinement for any length of
time.</p>
<p>Although the nectar of flowers forms a
large part of their food, it has been shown
that insects also form no inconsiderable
portion.</p>
<p>The high degree of intelligence possessed
by the hummingbirds is shown
in the construction of their nests. Some
of the species make the nests “of such
form or material as will serve to imitate
natural excrescences of a branch, such as
a knot or a pine cone.” Other species
make a hammock-like nest that they suspend
from cliffs by attaching spiders’
webs. Mr. Thomas M. Brewer writes:
“Indeed, it is probable that there is no
other family whose architectural achievements
are more varied than those of the
hummingbirds. These variations include
not only the material of which the
nests are made and the positions in which
they are placed; but also the general style
of their construction, exhibiting constant
differences, in the several species, in the
ingenuity and beauty displayed in each
design.” Even individual species will
change the usual plan of their nests in
order to adapt them to the requirements
of their environment. In favorable localities
a new nest will be built each season
on top of the old one of the year before.
“The hermit hummingbirds fasten their
elongated nests to one side of the extremity
of long-pointed leaves for protection,
it is supposed, against monkeys and
other predaceous animals.”</p>
<p>The eggs of the hummingbirds, invariably
two in number, are white and
free from spots. Though very small
they are large when compared with the
size of the bird that laid them. It is
claimed by most authorities that under
favorable conditions two broods are
raised each season.</p>
<p>The Anna’s Hummingbird of our illustration
is one of the most striking of
those best known. It is perhaps the
most beautiful of the species that frequent
the United States. It is a native
of California and in its migrations passes
southward through Arizona to the table-lands
of Mexico. It is also found in
Lower California.</p>
<p>The head and ruff of the male have
a lustrous metallic purplish red color.
The female is bronze green above,
though the top of the head is sometimes
brownish, showing but little if any metallic
luster. Both sexes vary somewhat
in color. This is especially true of the
males, some individuals having more
purplish red on the crown and throat
than others.</p>
<p>This species inhabits a metal producing
region and it is an interesting fact, as
cited by Mr. Gould in his “Monograph of
the Hummingbirds,” that “those districts
or countries having a metalliferous
character are tenanted by species of
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
hummingbirds which are more than
ordinarily brilliant and glittering.”</p>
<p>Major Charles Bendire in his “Life
Histories of North American Birds,”
records an interesting observation of Mr.
A. W. Anthony regarding the hatching
of an Anna’s Hummingbird. These
words probably well describe the process
followed by all the species.</p>
<p>Writing in regard to a set of eggs
which he had collected, he says: “I was
somewhat disgusted to find one of the
eggs pipped and, realizing the difficulty
of making a presentable specimen of it,
was on the point of throwing it away
when a movement on the part of the
tiny creature within the shell suggested
to my mind that I hatch the egg and find
out for myself how baby hummingbirds
come into the world. So far there was
but a pin point broken, the rest of the
shell being intact; and it was several
minutes before the warmth of my hand,
aided by my breath, produced another
movement upon the part of the prospective
hummer; first a feeble struggle, followed
by an interval of rest; another
squirm and the point of the bill came in
view and was withdrawn; after a moment’s
rest a new system was adopted,
which consisted of turning around in the
shell from right to left and cutting a
clean, smooth opening with the sharp,
horny tip on the upper mandible; this
operation was evidently hard work and
required all the strength of the little
mite, and frequent rests were necessary to
recruit. Sometimes an interval of twisting
seemed to accomplish nothing, and
it would look as if all its struggles would
be in vain. I wondered whether the
parent would not render a little much-needed
assistance at this stage; but after
an interval of rest the work would be
continued with renewed vigor and another
millimetre cut toward the outer
world. The cutting was all done in the
same direction. When the shell had been
cut four-fifths around, the chick succeeded
in getting one claw hooked over the
edge of the break, and by one or two
vigorous pushes broke the remaining
shell, leaving in my hand two nearly
equal parts of what had been a hummingbird’s
egg and a squirming something
that bore no semblance whatever
to one of the peerless members of the
genus Calypte.” The entire operation,
which added another individual to America’s
beautiful family of birds, required
but fifteen minutes of time. The energy
and perseverance of the little mass of
flesh was a hint of that pugnacious disposition
that would be so striking a characteristic
when it became fully grown
and clothed with its resplendent metallic
plumage.</p>
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