Attracting Ruby-Throated Hummingbirds to Your Yard

Attracting Ruby-Throated Hummingbirds to Your Yard

Ruby-throated hummingbirds are common and much beloved summer visitors to yards and gardens throughout the eastern U.S. and Canada. In this episode of the Backyard Ecology podcast, we talk about ruby-throated hummingbirds, their northward migration, and how to make our yards more hummingbird friendly. We are joined in this conversation by Cyndi Routledge who is the CEO of Southeastern Avian Research (SEAR).

When people think about attracting hummingbirds to their yards, the most common reaction is to put up a hummingbird feeder. However, making your yard more attractive to hummingbirds goes way beyond just putting up a feeder. Approximately, 80% of a ruby-throated hummingbird's diet consists of soft-bodied insects. Hummingbirds also prefer natural nectar sources over sugar-water while they are nesting and raising young. Water sources and places to build nests or find shelter from storms are also important factors that hummingbirds look for when choosing their territories.

Cyndi and I spend a significant amount of time discussing what makes good hummingbird habitats and how we can use this knowledge to make our yards more attractive to ruby-throated hummingbirds. Cyndi also shares with us the proper way to maintain our feeders if we choose to put up hummingbird feeders. As she points out, hummingbird feeders are for our enjoyment, not the hummingbirds' survival. So, if we choose to put out feeders, then it is our responsibility to make sure that they aren't going to inadvertently harm the birds. Other topics in our conversation include the ruby-throated hummingbird's migration north, some common myths and folktales that we often hear, how hummingbirds are adapted to survive cold temperatures, the different roles of the male and female hummingbirds, and much more.

Links:

Episode image:

Episoder(115)

The Great Backyard Bird Count

The Great Backyard Bird Count

The Great Backyard Bird Count is an annual citizen science / community science project hosted by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Audubon, and Birds Canada. This international project takes place all o...

4 Feb 202141min

The Valuable Ecological Roles of Crayfish and the Discovery of Two New Species

The Valuable Ecological Roles of Crayfish and the Discovery of Two New Species

We're lucky in the eastern U.S. because bodies of water are pretty common. For most of us, if we don't have access to a creek, stream, river, pond, etc. in our immediate backyards, then we likely have...

28 Jan 20211h 9min

Native Seed Production and Tips for Starting a New Native Plant Garden or Restoration Area

Native Seed Production and Tips for Starting a New Native Plant Garden or Restoration Area

Growing native plants has grown in popularity over the last couple of decades. This has led to an increased demand for native plant seeds. However, many of us have never really stopped to think about ...

21 Jan 20211h 3min

Land Snails and their Amazing Diversity

Land Snails and their Amazing Diversity

Land snails???? Come on, how do they fit with Backyard Ecology? True, land snails aren't the most charismatic organism in our yards and communities, so it would be easy to just write them off and igno...

14 Jan 202156min

Conserving our Southeastern Grasslands with Dwayne Estes

Conserving our Southeastern Grasslands with Dwayne Estes

Many of us grew up hearing about the decline of the old growth forests and their impacts on neotropical songbirds and other wildlife. I think this was especially true for those of us who grew up here ...

7 Jan 202154min

Native and Non-native Earthworms in the Eastern U.S. with Mac Callaham

Native and Non-native Earthworms in the Eastern U.S. with Mac Callaham

Hi Everyone! Today we are talking with Mac Callaham who is a Research Ecologist with the Southern Research Station of the U.S. Forest Service. Mac's focus is on invasive species, with a specialty in s...

31 Des 202053min

Moths in the Winter with Shelby Fulton

Moths in the Winter with Shelby Fulton

Hi, Everyone! In today's episode of the Backyard Ecology podcast we are talking with Shelby Fulton who is a terrestrial biologist with the Kentucky Nature Preserves. Our conversation focuses on moths ...

24 Des 202031min

An Introduction to iNaturalist with Maddy Heredia

An Introduction to iNaturalist with Maddy Heredia

Hi Everyone! On today's episode of Backyard Ecology, we talk with Maddy Heredia who is the outreach specialist and a biologist with the Kentucky Nature Preserves. Maddy and I first met when she was in...

17 Des 202036min

Populært innen Vitenskap

fastlegen
rekommandert
jss
tingenes-tilstand
liberal-halvtime
sinnsyn
forskningno
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid
rss-nysgjerrige-norge
villmarksliv
dekodet-2
rss-rekommandert
fjellsportpodden
rss-paradigmepodden
smart-forklart
tidlose-historier
kvinnehelsepodden
utenrikshospitalet
vett-og-vitenskap-med-gaute-einevoll
nevropodden