Courtesy Preview
To view this account in its entirety (complete life history articles, audio, video, photo content and full references), you will need to sign in with your subscription account information. You can subscribe online and gain immediate access to this additional information in this species account.
Introduction
The Broad-tailed Hummingbird is the major breeding hummingbird of higher elevations in the southern and central Rocky Mountains, eastern California, and Mexico. In the mountains of the western U.S., its breeding season is characterized by a brief flower season and often chilling nocturnal climate in which selection of appropriate microclimate and the ability to undergo torpor are necessary responses. Throughout its range, it is most abundant in open subalpine meadows and shrubby habitats with nearby forests. It feeds on nectar, usually avoiding flowers recently visited, and on small insects, caught on the wing or snatched from vegetation. A promiscuous breeder, courting male Broad-tails perform spectacular aerial displays—a series of high climbs, dives, and hovers, accompanied by a loud wing trill that is heard also during aggressive territorial displays.
This hummingbird has been the subject of many detailed studies of its physiology and feeding ecology. Named from a specimen taken in Mexico by Swainson in 1834, it was first collected in the U.S. by J. H. Clark in 1851 near El Paso, TX. Elliot Coues incorrectly attributed its discovery to Meriwether Lewis and William Clark in Idaho, outside of the current breeding range (Banks and Calder 1989).
Calder, William A. and Lorene L. Calder. 1992. Broad-tailed Hummingbird (Selasphorus platycercus), The Birds of North America Online (A. Poole, Ed.). Ithaca: Cornell Lab of Ornithology; Retrieved from the Birds of North America Online: http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/016