High-flying hummingbirds have bigger wings than lowlanders, a new study found,
but when it comes to evasive and aggressive maneuvering, bigger is not always
better.
To compensate for the thinner air at higher elevations, researchers found that
the tiny birds evolved bigger wings than their low-elevation brethren. The increased
size of the wing also results in a wing stroke that moves through a greater
range of motion. The effect is that the birds have less power to fly quickly
through the air.
"Larger wings and sweep angles means less excess power beyond hovering,"
said Douglas Altshuler, a postdoctoral fellow at Caltech. "The excess power
they can produce steadily decreases as elevation increases."
The excess power to which Altshuler refers is the power available to a hummingbird
when it is not hovering, but moving through the air. Larger wings are necessary
for the environment at high elevations, but they are also more unwieldy and
require more energy to sustain. When a hummingbird wants to move, smaller wings
are an advantage.
Scientists also found that the quantity of surplus power, which is what gives
the tiny avian the ability to evade predators and maintain territorial control,
becomes such a valuable commodity that it is the main predictor of which hummers
dominate on high.
"The birds that are dominant at high elevations are the ones with the
most excess power,". "At low elevations
it is just a suite of important characteristics."
Researchers hoped to resolve why more hummingbirds do not live at higher elevations
where there are fewer predators and seemingly less competition. At first glance,
sacrificing power would appear to be a reasonable explanation, but the field
studies in Peru revealed that everything is not always as it seems.
"It turns out that if you account for the relative area available - meaning
there is more area where the birds can live at lower elevations than at higher
– diversity is rather flat at all elevations," explained Altshuler.
The two-year study is detailed in the Dec. 13 issue of the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences. Researchers netted humming birds between
elevations of 1,300 feet (400 meters) and 14,100 feet (4,300 meters) in a field
area that ranged from the Amazon lowlands to the mountains near Cuzco, Peru.
From those 1,000 birds researchers observed 43 species that ranged in weight
from 1/10 to 8/10 of an ounce (3 to 26 grams).
Scientists think the variety simply reflects adaptation to their environment.
"Think about the first hummingbird that crept up in elevation because
there was no competition," Altshuler said. "Then another moves up in elevation
that is bigger and can dominate the first. One might evolve to rely on size
and dominance, and the other might move towards the extreme of becoming smaller
and a sneaker to outwit the larger bird. A lot of it is just about evolution
and filling a niche."