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Wednesday, 24 January 2024

Wild Bird Wednesday 600 - Bee Hummingbird

 Welcome to the 600th WBW! And as this is a special week, we have a special bird.

The Bee Hummingbird (Mellisuga helenae) is endemic to Cuba, and is also the smallest known bird in the world.

Females weigh 2.6 g and are 6.1 cm long, the males are slightly smaller with an average weight of 1.95 g and length of 5.5 cm.  In other words we are looking at a bird which is about the same size as the first joint of your thumb, and a weight (mass really!) of about 1/2 a sugar cube.

By any measure, that's small.












The male has bluish upper parts, and the rest of the underparts mostly greyish white.  Females are bluish green with a pale grey underside. Like all hummingbirds, this species lays two eggs - they are about the size of a frozen pea!

As you can see from the final picture, these birds were active around species feeders - but what a sight!

As ever, to join in with (the 600th!) WBW click in the link below.  SM

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

12 comments:

  1. Hari OM
    Congrats on the milestone... and what a wee gem of a birdie!!! YAM xx

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  2. What a treat! Thank you for sharing!

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  3. I've been seeing an abundance of hummingbirds here in Costa Rica. But they are so hard to photograph. Good job! As always.

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  4. Congratulations on your accomplishment! Thank you so much for providing us this weekly party, Stewart Aloha!

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  5. You have it back to front, Stewart, the males are smaller than the female, not larger - as the dimensions you cite indicate. Bigger or smaller they are both fabulous.

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  6. Beautiful bird photography every week!

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  7. Such a remarkable and memorable sighting

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  8. Stewart hese are fabulous shots considering it the smallest bird in the air and flying. Well done. Thanks for hosting all these post and congratulation on your 600th post. Have a great week ahead

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  9. beautiful.....
    they will come to our area soon

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  10. Great photos of a beautiful little bird!

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  11. What a precious little jewel!

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  12. Congratulations. A big milestone and in its honour I have joined in with my rare photo of a bird. Rare for me that is not the bird.

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