The FWP weekly digest of wondrous wildlife happenings
and other interesting items from the natural world

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Lisa S. French
Hummingbird
Hummingbirds: They’re Cool Like That

1.5-minute read

When it comes to achieving a serious level of avian chill, according to research from the University of New Mexico, South American hummingbirds are in a league of their own. These mini masters of hovering flight can significantly lower their overnight body temperature and rate of metabolism to ensure they live to fly another day. This short, inactive state, referred to as torpor in biology lingo, is similar to a very compressed period of hibernation. For hummingbirds that live in cold, high-elevation habitats, having the ability to enter a state of deep torpor is essential to their survival.

Researchers studying torpor as an adaptation to extreme environments in six species of tropical hummingbirds native to the Andes recently recorded the lowest body temperature to date amongst birds—3.26 °C in the black metaltail, aka Mettalura phoebe. By comparison, the body temperature of animals that hibernate for many days or weeks, like bears, groundhogs, and hedgehogs, drops to about 5 °C.

So why have these zippy, little nectar sippers developed such an exceptional chill skill? For an animal that weighs between 2 and 4 grams and has the highest mass-specific metabolic rate of any vertebrate, surviving in a cold, wet, low-oxygen environment is no small feat. To maintain its body mass, a hummingbird’s daily intake of nectar can exceed its total weight. According to the National Park Service, an average man would have to eat 285 pounds of meat daily to maintain his weight if he had the tiny bird’s metabolism. That’s one Whopper patty a minute for 19 hours! Plus, sustaining hovering flight of up to 4,000 wing beats per minute at 4,000 metres above sea level takes an incredible amount of energy.

To help maximize their fat reserves, Andean hummingbirds boost their caloric intake before bedtime and roost in thermally insulated caves, but torpor is their survival superpower. The more time hummingbirds spend torpid overnight, the lower their energy loss. Apparently, hummingbirds that deeply chill while they snooze don’t lose, and that energy conservation is one of the primary reasons why these mesmerizing creatures can persevere in harsh mountain environments. Isn’t evolutionary adaptation remarkable!

Speaking of hummingbirds, if you’d like to give your back-to-school brain a rest why not take a crack at the Audubon Hummingbird Wing Beat Challenge! Gather the kids or your favorite avian-loving adult(s) and see if you can flap your arms as fast as a hummingbird beats its wings. Start slow and try to match the American crow’s 20 wing beats per 10 seconds and then see how close you can get to the 500 wing beats of the broad-tailed hummingbird. Full disclosure, we only made it to 50 before we strained muscles that we didn’t know we had, but we bet you can top that. Happy flapping!

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Beaver Couple
And The Answer Is Beavers

1.5-minute read

Conservation quiz: Which plant-eating members of the animal kingdom have been directing their big, buck-toothed energy towards the task of healing the planet? According to a study in south-central Sweden, beavers going about their day-to-day dam building business are helping to increase biodiversity that is essential to the functioning of freshwater ecosystems.

By constructing mud and stick barriers that increase water levels, the paddle-tailed environmental change agents are engineering pond habitats that support a 50% greater variety of plants and animals than similar beaver-free wetlands. While you might think a pond is a pond is a pond, according to environmental researchers, there are subtle differences in beaver ponds that make them hospitable to more species of fish, birds, insects, amphibians, and plant life. What’s good for beavers is good for biodiversity. And what’s good for biodiversity is good for people and the planet.

Beavers can be found throughout North America, and small populations exist in Scandinavia, Germany, France, Poland, and central Russia. Following their extinction in Sweden in the 1890s, beavers were reintroduced from neighboring Norway between 1922 and 1939. Dams built by the imported animals helped to expand wildlife habitats and increase resilience to both droughts and floods. Over the past half century, more countries have jumped on the bring-back-the-beavers bandwagon, including England, which recently reintroduced the industrious creatures to the wild after 400 years.

While beavers can’t stop freshwater biodiversity loss on their own, at a time when flora and fauna are decreasing at an alarming rate, wider implementation of beaver-based wetland-engineering is a holistic way to protect and restore ecosystems for a healthier biosphere.

By the way, if you’ve ever wondered why beavers have tangerine-colored teeth, it’s not because they’re tree stained. The keystone species’ incisors are handily reinforced with iron to help them gnaw through even the toughest tree trunks with ease. Beaver on, aquatic architects!

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