Article Image

IPFS News Link • Science, Medicine and Technology

High-Speed Video Shows How Hummingbirds Really Drink

• Dave Mosher via WIRED.com
 
 New high-speed videos of hummingbirds overturn nearly two centuries of conventional wisdom on how they drink.

Researchers previously thought tube-like channels in their tongues sucked up fluid by capillary action. But the new analysis shows that their tongues actually trap nectar by curling around it.

“The first time I saw these videos, they blew my mind,” said ornithologist Alejandro Rico-Guevara of the University of Connecticut, co-author of a study published May 2 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. “I had studied the tongue’s structure in detail, but had no idea it could do something like this. We had to create a new model to explain it.”

With wings that flap up to 90 times per second and heart rates exceeding 1,200 beats per minute, hummingbirds depend on calorie-rich nectar for fuel. They can easily consume their own body weight in the stuff each day; one study described a 3-gram hummingbird drinking 43 grams of sugar water in one day, a full 14 times its body weight.

Researchers have long believed that capillary action — the phenomenon that causes liquid to rise up the sides of a narrow tube — enabled high-speed drinking. That idea was supported by the shape of the hummingbirds’ tongues, and its efficiency made intuitive sense.

There was, however, one major problem with the models. Capillary physics dictate that hummingbirds should prefer liquid with a sugar concentration of about 20 to 40 percent, as more sugary solutions would be too thick to rise quickly. But hummingbirds routinely choose fluids with double the predicted sugar levels.

To discover how hummingbirds drink, Rico-Guevara and colleague Margaret Rubega built see-through flowers that allowed them to take high-speed, high-magnification video of hummingbird tongues, which flick into nectar up to 20 times per second.

The video (above) shows that, instead of simply drawing in liquid, a hummingbird tongue’s tubes open down their sides when hitting nectar. When the tongue pulls back, the tubes zip closed, carrying nectar back into the beak.

 

PirateBox.info