Species of the day – March 10, 2013 – Brown-billed Scythebill (Campylorhamphus pusillus)

Photo by Sarah Hadley

Species of the day – March 10, 2013 – Brown-billed Scythebill (Campylorhamphus pusillus)

Clearly hummingbirds are not the only species of birds with long curved bills! This scythebill has an incredibly long, slender bill that it uses to probe into hard to reach places (deep into moss, cracks in bark, into clusters of vines etc.) to get prey items such as insects and spiders. The scythebill is a type of woodcreeper. It has a very strong tail like that of a woodpecker that supports it on the trunks of trees as it searches for food.

Species of the day – March 9, 2013 – Red-headed Barbet (Eubucco bourcierii)

Photo by Sarah Hadley

Species of the day – March 9, 2013 – Red-headed Barbet (Eubucco bourcierii)

This was the first time that we had caught one of these spectacular birds! The red-headed barbet is rather stocky bird with a relatively large bill. It eats fruit and insects. We caught the female just as we were about to close our nets and the end of a hummingbird capture session. Just after we released her we also got to see the male in a tree nearby. Barbets excavate cavities in dead trees and it is possible that they may have a nest nearby. In 2010 I found a red-headed barbet nest. I saw both of the parents and thought that they seemed to be watching me quite intently and looking a bit agitated. I backed away a bit and waited quietly. Sure enough, the female went down and hopped into a hole in a snag right beside the heliconia plant I had been collecting data on. It is amazing what you can find through being quiet and watching patiently!

 

As I released the female she perched on my hand briefly before taking off.

Species of the day – March 8, 2013 – Treehoppers or Thorn bugs (Membracidae) and a giant fly

Photo by Sarah Hadley

Species of the day – March 8, 2013 – Treehoppers or Thorn bugs (Membracidae) and a giant fly

These treehoppers were on the stem of a tree at one of the sites where we work. The big “thorn-like” ones are the adults and the smaller ones are the nymphs. Treehoppers pierce plant stems and then feed on sap. They are often very well camouflaged as thorns to prevent from being spotted by predators.

Later on we found this giant horse fly (Diptera). I would not want to get bitten by it! The mouthparts of this particular individual were damaged in the net. The nets are designed so that birds do not tend to get too tangled. If a researcher is well trained and careful they will almost never injure a bird. However, large flies, bees and beetles are very difficult to extract from the net since they tend to get net wrapped tightly around their different body segments. We try to extract these insects as unharmed as we can, but it can be very difficult. Thankfully most fly right through the nets without getting caught.


Species of the day – March 7, 2013 – Preying mantis (Mantodea)

Photo by Sarah Hadley

Species of the day – March 7, 2013 – Preying mantis (Mantodea)

Here is another amazing example of camouflage. This is a different species of preying mantis than the one we saw earlier (mantis #1). This one looks much more like a dead leaf, but is no less camouflaged. It must be a dangerous pace for a small insect to be wandering around when these are out there.

Species of the day – March 6, 2013 – Scaled Antpitta (Grallaria guatimalensis)

Photo by Sarah Hadley

Species of the day – March 6, 2013 – Scaled Antpitta (Grallaria guatimalensis)

This was only the second time in five years of netting hummingbirds that we have caught one of these birds! (We often have some other non-hummingbird species which we accidentally catch in the nets and release.) You have to be really lucky in order to see an antpitta. Antpittas have a very distinctive shape –large head, stocky round body, long legs and a very short tail. They spend most of their time running around on or near ground level.

Species of the day – March 5, 2013 – Green Tree Anole (Norops biporcatus)

Photo by Sarah Hadley

Species of the day – March 5, 2013 – Green Tree Anole (Norops biporcatus)

When we returned from the field today this green anole lizard was on a palm near where we park our truck.

This lizard has the ability to change color! At the beginning he was a bright green, but after we caught him to get a better look he started changing color to brown and green stripes. I have also seen them turn almost completely brown!

Species of the day – March 4, 2013 – Purple-crowned Fairy (Heliothryx barroti)

Photo by Sarah Hadley 

Species of the day – March 4, 2013 – Purple-crowned Fairy (Heliothryx barroti)

The purple-crowned fairy was a new capture for us. We caught one a few years ago, but nothing since. Today we caught two! These are very pretty hummingbirds. They are also noteworthy because they have quite a short, but very pointy bill. This is an ideal bill for stabbing through flowers to steal the nectar. Species that steal nectar without providing pollination services to the plant are called ‘nectar robbers’. There are species of hummingbirds and also bees that we typically think of as pollinators who commonly employ this “robbing” strategy. Consequently many of the flowers have evolved tough protective layers to try and impede these robbers.

 

 

Photo by Sarah Hadley

Species of the day –March 3, 2013– Rufous-tailed Hummingbird (Amazilia tzacatl)

Species of the day –March 3, 2013– Rufous-tailed Hummingbird (Amazilia tzacatl)

 

Photo by Sarah Hadley

Just because a species is common, or we see it all the time, doesn’t mean it isn’t interesting. I thought that it was about time we mention this common species of hummingbird. Rufous-tailed hummingbirds are a mid-sized. They are similar in weight to the green-hermits (a bit lighter), but they have a much shorter bill and behave very differently ecologically. Rufous-tails are territorial hummingbirds meaning that they defend flower resources and drive off other hummingbirds that try to visit them. We hear these guys chattering all over the place. They seem to do very well in disturbed areas and are probably one of the most common visitors to people’s gardens here in Costa Rica.

Night sights and sounds

I was out last night just before bed covering some heliconia flowers with mesh bags. I cover the flowers with these bags to prevent the hummingbirds from being able to access them. That way I can run experiments both with and without hummingbirds present depending on the experimental questions. I was covering them after dark since I wanted to leave the old flowers open to hummingbirds throughout the whole day and then have the new flowers covered before they opened the next morning.

The same clump of heliconia has a whole other suite of visitors at night. In the day there are mainly hummingbirds coming to drink the nectar. At night it seems to be when the insects come out. There are many species of Orthoptera (grasshoppers, crickets, katydids) that come to eat the flowers that were open during the day. They often eat any remaining pollen off the anthers and then the other soft parts of the flowers. I have a bit of a love/hate relationship with these critters since they are really cool and I usually see new exciting ones each time, but they often eat my carefully treated samples rendering them useless!! I also saw a giant round beetle that was bright green (I couldn’t ID it unfortunately) and a neat frog. There were ants with very large and imposing mandibles patrolling the leaves in the area where I had set my bag down. I had to be careful not to irritate any of the fearsome ants since I know from experience that their bites can be surprisingly painful!

As I worked I could hear both a Mottled Owl (Ciccaba virgata) and a Black-and-white Owl (Strix nigrolineata). There are also a great many other noises that I can only imagine what they may have been. I noticed that the large hairy spider from a few weeks ago was still hunting in the spikes of a palm tree near one of the plants. On my way back a kinkajou crossed through the bamboo and I was able to get a great look at him with my headlamp. Back at the cabin a little anole lizard had slipped in and I spent about ten minutes chasing him around before finally cornering him in the shower and letting him out. All in all it was a good reminder that not everything sleeps at night and much of the activity takes place after dark.

Photos by Sarah Hadley

Species of the day –March 2, 2013– Stripe-throated hermit (Phaethornis striigularis)

 

Photo by Sarah Hadley

Species of the day –March 2, 2013– Stripe-throated hermit (Phaethornis striigularis)

This little hummingbird often seems like a tiny version of the green hermit. It is a bit less than half the weight (2.5 grams or about the same as a penny). It is also brown rather than green. Like its larger cousin the green hermit, the stripe-throated hermit is a trapliner and does not defend flower resources. They are actually quite good at sneaking in undetected and stealing nectar right under the bills of territorial hummingbirds such as Rufous-tailed Hummingbird (Amazilia tzacatl). Mauricio and Esteban often refer to these little guys as “mosque” which means “fly”. They are fun birds to work with since they are quite tame and will come and visit the readers even as you are working with them.

This grainy photo is not actually of the hummingbird equivalent of a Sasquatch, but shows a stripe-throated visiting one of the readers. Interestingly, these tiny little guys seem to be moving further than we might have thought!

 

Photo by April Bartelt