Papers in the Biological Sciences
Title
Buzz-wings
Document Type
Article
Date of this Version
January 1985
Abstract
In Nebraska, the species of hummingbird
most likely to be seen, and indeed the only
one likely to be seen in the eastern half of the
state, is the ruby-throated hummingbird. This
is the most widely distributed of all North
American hummingbirds, and its breeding
range covers virtually all of eastern North
America north nearly to Hudson Bay. The
nesting range includes most of eastern Nebraska, but only along the Missouri River is
nesting at all regular. Nests have been reported as far west as North Platte. Ruby-throats typically arrive in Nebraska in early
April, with about half of the total available
spring records occurring between May
5 and 17. By June most of these birds will
have continued northward, to return again in
August during the fall migration. Typically,
birds leave in mid September. In mild falls,
stragglers may persist until early October.
Although ruby-throats have been,reported
as far west in Nebraska as Scotts Bluff
County, bird watchers in the Panhandle
should be on the alert for other species as well. The most likely of these is the broad-tailed,
which has been observed in Dawes and Scotts
Bluff counties. Broad-tails regularly nest in
Colorado, and are the species most likely
to be seen there in summer.
Two other species of hummingbirds have
also been reported in western Nebraska. The
rufous occupies a large summer range in
western North America and occasionally
strays into western Nebraska during fall
migration.
The last and rarest species of hummingbird
to occur in Nebraska is the calliope, which
breeds fairly commonly in western Wyoming, and which has only been seen a few
times in the state. The calliope is the smallest
of the hummingbirds that visit Nebraska, but
is so beautiful that even a fleeting glimpse of
the stunning male is long remembered.

Comments
Published in: "Birds of Nebraska", NEBRASKAland, 65:1 (1985), pp. 80-81. Used by permission.