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Quiz 24

Last post 08-17-2008, 1:57 PM by featherbrain. 4 replies.
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  •  08-10-2008, 2:39 PM 55201

    Quiz 24

    Attachment: Quiz 24.jpg

    Alright guys here's quiz 24...

    Taken in July in MT, lots of juvenile hummers out then! 6 points:



    featherbrainCool

    Try out my photo quiz!

    Life is simple: Eat, Sleep, and BIRD!

    "Walk softly and carry a big scope!"
  •  08-11-2008, 6:45 PM 55337 in reply to 55201

    Re: Quiz 24

    Man your tough.  There are three Hummers that I would consider.  It would help to know what the tail feathers look like when in flight.

    However, based primarily on your location, I will have to say a female Black-chinned Hummingbird.

     

    Filed under:
  •  08-12-2008, 8:12 AM 55365 in reply to 55337

    Re: Quiz 24

    DO NOT POST YOUR ANSWERS HERE, JIM!  send your answers to quiz@whatbird.com

    Featherbrain forgets that not everyone knows the rules to this quiz and that they are supposed to email their answers to him at the above address.


    Matthew 6:26
    James 1:2-5
  •  08-12-2008, 5:28 PM 55431 in reply to 55365

    Re: Quiz 24

    OOPS. Thanks
  •  08-17-2008, 1:57 PM 55850 in reply to 55337

    Re: Quiz 24

     

     Alright for this week's quiz it's easy to conclude that this bird is a species of hummingbird, it has the unique shape of a hummingbird, plus it's at a hummingbird feeder! Now we know that the location is Montana, so we pretty much have 4, possibly 5 species of regularly ocurring MT hummers. Black-chinned, Calliope, Broad-tailed, Rufous, and possibly Ruby-throated. Of course there's always the chance of a stray species, but we won't even consider that unless we rule out the regulars.

    Black-chinned has very similar primaries as this bird (broad and long) but the bird is much to stubby and there's a buffy wash on the belly plus the crown is much to bright which safely rules out Black-chinned.

    Broad-tailed can easily be ruled out by the long extension of the primaries.

    Rufous and Ruby-throated can be ruled out for the same reason as Broad-tailed.

    This leaves us with a perfect match for Calliope Hummingbird (Stellula calliope), everything seems to match, there's even a thin whit line over the gape (as Sibley shows, something I probably wouldn't have noticed).

    I took this photo of a female (or juvenile) Calliope Hummingbird in Polebridge, Montana in July.

    Congratulations to:

    roundywaves

    tim.birdboy

     

    Tallies of incorrect guesses:

    Ruby-throated Hummingbird - 1

    Black-chinned Hummingbird - 2


    featherbrainCool

    Try out my photo quiz!

    Life is simple: Eat, Sleep, and BIRD!

    "Walk softly and carry a big scope!"
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