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Hummingbirds

  • Idaho Matters takes a look at the role hummingbirds have playing in our history, including their affect on the pre-Columbian Americas or even during World War II!
  • Growth is changing the landscape in the Treasure Valley from fields and farmland to buildings and homes. As the fields disappear, so do the plants and flowers that bees, butterflies and other pollinators need to survive. A new project aims to bring back those flowers and the pollinators they rely on.
  • As winter begins, humming bird experts say more of the tiny birds may be sticking around the Northwest instead of migrating south. There are three types of hummingbirds Northwesterners might be seeing more of at feeders or in their yards this time of year: the Rufous, the Anna’s or the Allen’s hummingbirds. These little birds are able to survive the cold by lowering their body temperature, hiding in the lees of tree trunks, shivering to warm up and eating a lot. Laura Erickson with Cornell University’s Lab of Ornithology says because of climate change we might be seeing more of these birds. “As we have milder winters those individuals who remain in the north rather than moving further south are more likely to survive,” she says. At the same time, Erickson says those hummingbirds that do migrate south might be finding less friendly habitat than they used to. Erickson adds it’s a myth that feeding hummingbirds will convince them to stay north for longer. On the Web: Identifying Hummingbirds (Cornell Lab of Ornithology)