Heavy Hummingbirds And Their Mighty, Miniature Migrations
The average American consumed 4,500 calories at the Thanksgiving table last week. There’s no statistics available for how many they consumed while sleepily standing in front of the refrigerator later that night, though, and absolutely zero information regarding the amount of pie calories ingested for breakfast the next day.
Thanks to holiday feasts and generalized seasonal overconsumption, some of us might soon notice our bodies storing some of those extra calories away in the form of additional body weight.
Every fall, ruby-throated hummingbirds do much the same thing in preparation for one of the most remarkable migrations in the bird world. Their journey across the Gulf of Mexico might measure a mere 600 miles (~960 km), not a notable distance in the avian record books, but considering this diminutive bird couldn’t tip a balance versus a pair of pennies, it’s quite the trip.
How they fuel their flight is the real wonder. Hummingbirds need to flap their wings 50+ times per second in order to stay aloft, and their race car-tuned metabolism burns ten times more oxygen than elite human athletes (by weight anyway). This requires that they slurp up an incredible amount of food energy in the form of sugary nectar (supplemented with the occasional protein-rich insect).
The average ruby-throated hummingbird doesn’t carry much mass on the wing, weighing in at just more than a penny. During summer, about 20% of that weight is fat, but in preparation for their southerly journey they really pack on the pudginess, hitting upwards of 40% body fat. To do that, they’ll eat as often as every 15 minutes throughout the day, and as we saw in this video from Smarter Every Day last week, that can lead to some frenzied feeding.
Running out of gas while over open ocean would be disastrous for the birds, of course. But why use fat as long-distance fuel over sugar, their normal daily food source?
If ruby-throated hummingbirds powered their migration on sugars and carbohydrates, they’d need way more mass to get the same energy. Not only would they need to double their body weight with glycogen, they’d have to store water along with it, quickly adopting the aerodynamic profile of a lead zeppelin.
Although it is metabolized more slowly, fat provides about ten times more energy per gram than sugars, and provides water to the thirsty flyers as a side effect of the chemical reactions.
What’s even crazier is, although the hummingbirds burn through more than a third of their body weight in a single day when crossing the Gulf of Mexico, we burn the same mass of fat climbing a few flights of stairs! The fact that they can cross open ocean while burning just 14 calories blows my mind. That’s what I call good mileage.
Here’s a more in-depth research article about ruby-throated hummingbird metabolism if you want to dig into the science a bit deeper.
If you want to learn about some other record-setting bird migrations, including how they navigate using magnetic fields and why the flying V formation is the most efficient way to fly, check out this video over on the It’s Okay To Be Smart YouTube channel:
Image at top is not an actual fat hummingbird, just in case you’re wondering :)
Here’s a bit of a flashback.
Left is a year or so before coming out as trans. Also when I was underweight at 99lbs.
Right photo is 9 months on T, weighing in at 160lbs
Forget the eagles. Bette Midler really should have sung “I can fly higher than a bar-headed goose.”
In last week’s It’s Okay To Be Smart, we looked at the amazing science of bird migrations. One of the birds I mentioned in that video, the bar-headed goose, takes the highest altitude migration of any bird that we know of, crossing over the Himalayas in order to reach their summer nesting grounds in India. Some climbers have reported geese flying overhead at more than 27,000 feet (8.2 km) above sea level!
Bar-headed geese have a few tricks up their feathery sleeves to accomplish this. They’ve evolved special hemoglobin that snatches oxygen extra-efficiently from the thin air, and grow capillaries that reach far into their hungry muscles. But it’s the respiratory systems of birds in general that are the real secret to flying high without passing out.
As you can see in the awesome animated GIF above from Rosemary Lutz (tabletopwhale), birds’ lungs are more like bagpipes than balloons, using a system of inflatable sacs and valves to move air through in only one direction. This keeps more oxygenated air passing near to their arteries compared to our more inefficient two-way breathing system.
For more on these ceiling-scraping, deep-breathing geese, check out this article from Audubon magazine.
what would happen if you put a book into a kernalsprite?
like, would the sprite take on qualities of characters in the book
or would it just look like a literal book
What if you threw a copy of sburb at a sprite also?
Penguin falls down resulting in best sound ever [x]
oh my god
NOOOOOOO
they all gasped like OHHH
IM CRYING IM PHYSICALLY CRYING HE FALLS AND THERE ALL LIKE WHAAAAWHOA U OK BRO AND HE GETS UP LIKE *SIGH* YEAH ITS FINE
I just watched this like 8 times
Jesus





