From Opus
- Archilochus alexandri
[edit] Identification
3 1/4-3 3/4" (8-10 cm). A small hummingbird.
Male green above with iridescent black chin underlined by violet-purple throat band.
Female green above with white throat and breast, buff sides, and white-tipped outer tail feathers.
In East, female difficult to distinguish in field from female Ruby-throated. Structure like Ruby-throated: slender, small-headed, and thin-necked. Female distinguished from similar species by overall shape, long bill, flat forehead, drab greyish colour and longer wings with distinct club shaped primaries.
[edit] Distribution
Breeds from British Columbia south throughout West to Mexico and central Texas.
Winters in Mexico, though a small number of Black-chinned winter along the Gulf Coast of the USA.
[edit] Taxonomy
Monotypic[1]
[edit] Habitat
Mountain and alpine meadows, woodlands, canyons with thickets, chaparral, and orchards.
[edit] Behaviour
Black-chinned_Hummingbird (male) showing violet-purple throat band
Photo by
Larry D Smith
[edit] Breeding
Two white eggs in a nest of fluffy plant wool and lichens woven together with spider webs, placed in a shrub or low tree.
The male Black-chinned, like all hummingbirds, maintains a mating and feeding territory in spring. He courts his female with a dazzling aerial display involving a pendulum-like flight pattern. When mating interest wanes, the male often takes up residence elsewhere, near a good food supply. Later, when plant blooming and insect swarming subside, the birds move south.
[edit] Vocalisation
Voice: A low tup.
[edit] References
- Clements, JF. 2008. The Clements Checklist of Birds of the World. 6th ed., with updates to December 2008. Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0801445019. Spreadsheet available at http://www.birds.cornell.edu/clementschecklist.
[edit] External Links