Curious kids: Why don't hummingbirds get fat or sick from drinking sugary nectar?


Author: Jessica Pollock

(MENAFN- The Conversation)

Curious Kidsis a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you'd like an expert to answer, send it .

If you have a hummingbird feeder filled with sugar water, you might have the impression that all that hummingbirds need to live a healthy life is to sip sweet drinks all day long.

Believe it or not, these tiny birds need other types of fuel as well. While sugar makes upa large component of their diet , they also need proteins, fats, vitamins and minerals to be healthy. Their largest source of protein is from eating insects. If you watch hummingbirds near your feeders, you might get to see them do some erratic, zigzag flying – this is how they catch small insects flying through the air.

I've been studying hummingbirdsfor 10 years, and as part of my research, I place tiny aluminum bands on thousands of hummingbird legs to help me learn where they migrate and allow me to monitor how healthy their populations are each year.


What else do hummingbirds eat?

Hummingbirds will also pluck insects directly off of flowers, shrubs and trees. Some of their favorite bugs includessmall flies and gnats, ants, tiny insect eggs, larva and even small spiders .

Some people report seeing hummingbirds eatingdirt, sandandcampfire ashestoo. Ornithologists suspect this is to gain certainvitamins and minerals . They are also known toeat pollen and even tree sap . So a hummingbird diet is actually quite complex and varied, and they can't eat sugar alone to survive.

When humans eat too much sugar consistently, their blood sugar levels rise and they are at risk of getting diabetes. Hummingbirds anatomy and digestion are very different from humans. While nectar accounts for about 90% of their diet, hummingbirds don't getdiabetessince their bodies are designed specifically for digesting sucrose. With a heartbeat that can reach 1,260 beats per minute , hummingbirds need the sugar rush.




A hummingbird slurping nectar from Salvia officinalis flowers.
Kit Leong

How to attract and feed hummingbirds

Diluted white sugar most closely resembles the sucrose nectar of flowers the birds feed on. You can easily fill your feeders with sugar water.Mix four parts water to one part white sugarand then boil, cool and fill the feeder. Remember to clean and refill your feeder every few days, especially in hot weather. A dirty or moldy feeder can make hummingbirds sick.

Don't ever use brown sugar, honey, or any other type of sweetener, which can harm a hummingbird. For example, brown sugar has too much iron in it. Try not to make it too much sweeter than a 4:1 ratio because it is harder for them to digest. There is such a thing as too sweet, even for a hummingbird.

Did you know that hummingbirds probably don't want red dye added to their sugar water?Red dye serves no healthy purpose for their body(or yours). Most red dyes are petroleum-based, and it makes their poop red, which is unnatural.

The red color on your feeder is enough for a hummingbird to find it. Or consider planting some red or purple flowers inyour garden, like Salvias or Monardas– hummingbirds love them and they're great sources of insects too.

So don't be shocked if a hummingbird zips past you feeder and ignores a fresh batch of sugar water. It might be focused on getting its protein fix and catching a flying gnat right out of the air.

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    Diabetes
    Birds
    Ornithology
    Sugar
    Hummingbird
    Curious Kids
    Curious Kids US


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